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  2. Counterparty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterparty

    A counterparty (sometimes contraparty) is a legal entity, unincorporated entity, or collection of entities to which an exposure of financial risk may exist. The word became widely used in the 1980s, particularly at the time of the Basel I deliberations in 1988. [1] [page needed]

  3. Counterpart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterpart

    A 'Counterpart' is a person or thing that has the same purpose as another one in a different place or organization [1] In paleontology, one half of a split compression fossil Counterpart International , a U.S.-based development charity

  4. Central counterparty clearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Counterparty_Clearing

    A central clearing counterparty (CCP), also referred to as a central counterparty, is a financial market infrastructure organization that takes on counterparty credit risk between parties to a transaction and provides clearing and settlement services for trades in foreign exchange, securities, options, and derivative contracts.

  5. State court (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_court_(United_States)

    In the United States, a state court is a law court with jurisdiction over disputes with some connection to a U.S. state.State courts handle the vast majority of civil and criminal cases in the United States; the United States federal courts are far smaller in terms of both personnel and caseload, and handle different types of cases.

  6. Generic drug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generic_drug

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requires generics to be identical to or within an acceptable bioequivalent range of their brand-name counterparts, with respect to pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties. [3] Biopharmaceuticals, such as monoclonal antibodies, differ biologically from small-molecule drugs.

  7. Trump’s Super Tuesday victory was an outcome that Murdoch, the billionaire media mogul and one-time Republican kingmaker who controls Fox News, had hoped to avoid.

  8. Escrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escrow

    An escrow is a contractual arrangement in which a third party (the stakeholder or escrow agent) receives and disburses money or property for the primary transacting parties, with the disbursement dependent on conditions agreed to by the transacting parties.

  9. 'Not Like Us' at Super Bowl 59? Origins of the song fueled by ...

    www.aol.com/not-us-super-bowl-59-120410965.html

    By mid-January, Drake's attorneys dropped those motions and filed a federal lawsuit in the Southern District of New York against UMG, according to court documents obtained by USA TODAY. It accuses ...