When it comes to dealing with the money of others, all sorts of
interesting factors arise and there is plenty of elbow room for rogues.
Not exact matches
The third case is perhaps the most
interesting because it
arises out of a novel
factor.
This is probably correct, but there can be transitional difficulties if borrowers have not
factored in rising
interest rates, have assumed that the debt servicing burden will be quickly eroded by rising incomes or, in the case of investment property, that it can be sold quickly without loss if a need
arises.
This exposes the portfolio to sector - concentration risk
arising from sector - specific risk
factors, such as adverse
interest rate movements.
In general, MBIA's market risk relates to changes in the value of financial instruments that
arise from adverse movements in
factors such as
interest rates, credit spreads and foreign exchange rates.
Price risk is the risk that the fair value or future cash flows of a financial instrument will fluctuate due to a change in market prices (other than those
arising from
interest rate risk or currency risk), whether those changes are caused by
factors specific to the individual financial instrument or its issuer, or
factors affecting similar financial instruments traded in the market.
In a 2015 Champman University study examining
factors influencing partner choices, some
interesting (but not surprising) gender differences
arose:
In recent years, change in the Canadian legal landscape has been fuelled by two dominant
factors: first, the growing influence of constitutional concerns, including federal / provincial division of powers issues and a variety of matters
arising from the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and second, the burgeoning number and power of Charter - oriented administrative tribunals that play an increasingly influential role in our complicated,
interest - based society.
A critical
factor in understanding the way in which native title law confines the recognition of the rights and
interests arising from Indigenous laws and customs is by uncovering the assumptions underlying the Court's conception of sovereignty and the consequences it attributes to the acquisition of sovereignty by the British Crown.