Bank AcceptancesU.S. Government Printing Office, 1910 - 20 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 5.
10. lappuse
... bank forwards the bills to its London correspondent , which presents them for acceptance to the bank upon which they are drawn . Upon the acceptance of the bills the documents are delivered to the accepting ΙΟ National Monetary Commission.
... bank forwards the bills to its London correspondent , which presents them for acceptance to the bank upon which they are drawn . Upon the acceptance of the bills the documents are delivered to the accepting ΙΟ National Monetary Commission.
12. lappuse
... presents the bills to the bank on which they are drawn— that is , the bank with which the credit was opened . Upon the acceptance of the bills the documents are delivered . They are then sent by the London accepting bank to the New York ...
... presents the bills to the bank on which they are drawn— that is , the bank with which the credit was opened . Upon the acceptance of the bills the documents are delivered . They are then sent by the London accepting bank to the New York ...
13. lappuse
... presents a statement to the importer indicating the amount of pounds sterling which must be remitted to London to provide for their payment at matu- rity or rather a bill stated in dollars for the amount of pounds sterling drawn under ...
... presents a statement to the importer indicating the amount of pounds sterling which must be remitted to London to provide for their payment at matu- rity or rather a bill stated in dollars for the amount of pounds sterling drawn under ...
14. lappuse
... present banking system our imports do not create a supply of exchange on New York , for ex- ample , which can be sold in foreign countries to those who have payments to make in New York . This means that our exporters are also , to ...
... present banking system our imports do not create a supply of exchange on New York , for ex- ample , which can be sold in foreign countries to those who have payments to make in New York . This means that our exporters are also , to ...
15. lappuse
... present limitations of the national bank act there are three principal ways in which a country bank may render its surplus funds productive . It may deposit them with its reserve agent . This means a low interest return , too low in ...
... present limitations of the national bank act there are three principal ways in which a country bank may render its surplus funds productive . It may deposit them with its reserve agent . This means a low interest return , too low in ...
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Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
234 per cent 61ST CONGRESS accept time bills Acceptances By LAWRENCE accepted by prime accepting bank Aldrich balance of indebtedness bank deposits Bank of England bank to accept bank-accepted bills banking system banks and bankers banks are forced bills drawn bills in London bills of exchange call rate central bank commercial paper competition country bank day-to-day loans desire to realize development of banking difference between European discount rate rises English bank EUGENE HALE European discount rate financial centers fluctuations Foreign discount rates funds to London Government HERNANDO D investment in sterling LAWRENCE MERTON JACOBS London bank London for investment London in settlement ment MERTON JACOBS Washington national bank act NATIONAL MONETARY COMMISSION NELSON W Paris discount rate permit bank acceptances PIATT ANDREW pounds sterling prohibition of bank promissory notes purchases rediscount reserve shipper speculation sterling bills supply of bills tion transaction uniformity of security York banks York call-loan rate
Populāri fragmenti
9. lappuse - is, a rate which fluctuates with the value of money and normally leaves a certain margin of profit to the London bank. The same practice is followed in all the great financial centers of Europe. With us, country banks receive a fixed rate of interest for their deposits, usually 2 per cent, the year
7. lappuse - the rating of the mercantile agencies, or the opinion of some correspondent bank. It means, furthermore, the tying up of the bank's funds for a fixed period. If national banks were permitted to accept time bills the country bank could then invest its funds in paper bearing the guaranty of some great bank with whose standing it
1. lappuse - not suitable. Foreign banks will not purchase it because they are not ,/^*' acquainted with or sure of the rating of miscellaneous mercantile establishments and because such paper could not be readily disposed of in case it became necessary or profitable to withdraw funds from New York for remittance elsewhere.