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bonds

A Wisdom Archive on bonds

bonds

A selection of articles related to bonds

We recommend this article: bonds - 1, and also this: bonds - 2.
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bonds, Bonds

ARTICLES RELATED TO bonds

bonds: Encyclopedia - Bonds

Bonds can refer to: People called Bonds Barry Bonds Bobby Bonds Other related archivesBarry Bonds, Bobby Bonds

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bonds: Encyclopedia - Bonding
In telecommunication and electrical engineering, the term bonding has the following meanings: The process of connecting together metal parts so that they make low resistance electrical contact for direct current and lower frequency alternating currents. The process of establishing the required degree of electrical continuity between two or more conductive surfaces that are to be joined. Source: from Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188 and from the Department of Defen ...

Read more here: » Bonding: Encyclopedia - Bonding

bonds: Encyclopedia - Bond

Securities Bond Commercial paper Hybrid security Stock Warrant Markets Bond market Stock market Stock exchange Stocks Share Stock Warrant Bonds by coupon Fixed rate bond Floating rate note Zero coupon bond Inflation-indexed bond Bonds by collateral Asset-backed security Collateralized debt obligation Collateralized mortgage obligation Credit linked note Mortgage ...

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Read more here: » Bond: Encyclopedia - Bond

bonds: Encyclopedia II - Bond - Investing in bonds

Bonds are bought and traded mostly by institutions like pension funds, insurance companies and banks. Most individuals who want to own bonds do so through mutual funds. Still, in the U.S., nearly ten percent of all bonds outstanding are held directly by households. Bonds are generally viewed as safer investments than stocks, but this perception is only partially correct. Bonds do suffer from less day-to-day volatility than stocks, and bonds' interest payments are higher than dividend payments that the same company would generally choo ...

See also:

Bond, Bond - Issuers, Bond - Issuing bonds, Bond - Features of bonds, Bond - Types of bond, Bond - Trading and valuing bonds, Bond - See, Bond - Investing in bonds, Bond - Arguments against bonds

Read more here: » Bond: Encyclopedia II - Bond - Investing in bonds

bonds: Encyclopedia II - Bond - Trading and valuing bonds

The interest rate that the issuer of a bond must pay is influenced by a variety of factors, such as current market interest rates, the length of the term and the credit worthiness of the issuer. Since these factors are likely to change over time, the market value of a bond can vary after it is issued. Because of these differences in market value, bonds are priced in terms of percentage of par value. Bonds are not necessarily issued at par (100% of face value, corresponding to a price of 100), but all bond prices converge to par at the moment ...

See also:

Bond, Bond - Issuers, Bond - Issuing bonds, Bond - Features of bonds, Bond - Types of bond, Bond - Trading and valuing bonds, Bond - See, Bond - Investing in bonds, Bond - Arguments against bonds

Read more here: » Bond: Encyclopedia II - Bond - Trading and valuing bonds

bonds: Encyclopedia II - Bond masonry - Running bond

This is the most common bond in modern times, as it is easy to lay. It consists of course entirely comprised of stretchers (giving its alternate name stretcher bond) offset by half a brick length. As the bond uses no headers it allows a thin wall (half a brick thickness). Two such walls may be built close together and the gap filled with Cavity wall insulation. For this reason this bond is sometimes known as cavity wall bond, although it is possible to give the appearance of other bonds in a half-brick cavity wall, either through extensive brick-cu ...

See also:

Bond masonry, Bond masonry - Running bond, Bond masonry - English bond, Bond masonry - Flemish bond, Bond masonry - Garden Wall bond, Bond masonry - Herringbone bond, Bond masonry - Basket bond

Read more here: » Bond masonry: Encyclopedia II - Bond masonry - Running bond

bonds: Encyclopedia - Bond market

Securities Bond Commercial paper Hybrid security Stock Warrant Markets Bond market Stock market Stock exchange Stocks Share Stock Warrant Bonds by coupon Fixed rate bond Floating rate note Zero coupon bond Inflation-indexed bond Bonds by collateral Asset-backed security Collateralized debt obligation Collateralized mortgage obligation Credit linked note M ...

Read more here: » Bond market: Encyclopedia - Bond market

bonds: Encyclopedia II - Municipal bond - Purpose of municipal bonds

Municipal bond - Municipal bond issuers. Municipal bonds are issued by states, cities, and counties, or their agencies (the municipal issuer) for the purpose of raising funds. The methods and practices of issuing debt are governed by an extensive system of laws and regulations, which vary by state. Bonds bear interest at either a fixed or variable rate of interest. The issuer of a municipal bond receives a cash payment at the time of issuance in exchange for a promise to repay the investors who prov ...

See also:

Municipal bond, Municipal bond - Purpose of municipal bonds, Municipal bond - Municipal bond issuers, Municipal bond - Municipal bond holders, Municipal bond - Characteristics of municipal bonds, Municipal bond - Taxability, Municipal bond - Risk, Municipal bond - Comparison to corporate bonds

Read more here: » Municipal bond: Encyclopedia II - Municipal bond - Purpose of municipal bonds

bonds: Encyclopedia - Bond masonry

When laying bricks, the manner in which the bricks overlap is called the bond. A brick laid with its longest side exposed is called a stretcher, as opposed to a header, where only the end of the brick can be seen in the brickwork. The thickness of brickwork is often measured using units of length known as the brick. The length of the longest face of a particular brick equals "one brick" for the ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bond masonry: Encyclopedia - Bond masonry

bonds: Encyclopedia - Bond length

Bond length or bond distance in molecular geometry is the distance between two bonded atoms in a molecule. Bond length - Explanation. Bond length is directly related to bond order, when more electrons participate in bond formation the bond will get shorter. Bond length is also directly related to bond strength and the bond dissociation energy as a stronger bond is also a shorter bond. In a bond between two identical atoms half the bond distance is equal to the covalent radius. Bond lengths are measured in m ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bond length: Encyclopedia - Bond length

bonds: Encyclopedia - Chemical bond

A chemical bond is the physical phenomenon of chemical substances being held together by electrons or by electrostatic forces. Classically, strong chemical bonds are found in molecules, crystals or in solid metal and they organize the atoms in ordered structures. Weak chemical bonds are classically explained to be effects of polarity, or the lack of it, of strong bonds. In theory, all bonds can be explained by quantum theory, but in practice, chemical bonds are divided in several categories. Simplifications of quantum theory ha ...

Including:

Read more here: » Chemical bond: Encyclopedia - Chemical bond

bonds: Encyclopedia - Covalent bond

Covalent bonding is an intermolecular form of chemical bonding characterized by the sharing of one or more pairs of electrons between two species, producing a mutual attraction that holds the resultant molecule together. Atoms tend to share electrons in such a way that their outer electron shells are filled. Such bonds are always stronger than the intermolecular hydrogen bond and similar in strength to or stronger than the ionic bond. Covalent bonding most frequently occurs between atoms with similar electronegativities. For th ...

Including:

Read more here: » Covalent bond: Encyclopedia - Covalent bond

bonds: Encyclopedia - Capture-bonding

Capture-bonding is descriptive term for Stockholm syndrome in Evolutionary psychology terms. About 1980 John Tooby, then in graduate school, discussed the concept of capture-bonding with various other students--reportedly reaching the same conclusion Keith Henson did 15 years later about its evolutionary origin and widespread effects on humans and human societies. (Information from Leda Cosmides.) ...

Read more here: » Capture-bonding: Encyclopedia - Capture-bonding

bonds: Encyclopedia - Bond Street

Bond Street is a major shopping street in the West End of London. It is one of the principal streets in the West End shopping district and is more upmarket than nearby Regent Street and Oxford Street. It is in the Mayfair district of London, and has been a fashionable shopping street since the 18th century. The southern section is known as Old Bond Street, and the northern section, which is rather more than half the total length, as New Bond Street, but this di ...

Read more here: » Bond Street: Encyclopedia - Bond Street

bonds: Encyclopedia - James Bond

James Bond, also known as 007 (pronounced "double-oh seven"), is a fictional British spy introduced by writer Ian Fleming in 1953. Fleming wrote numerous novels and short stories based upon the character and, after his death in 1964, further literary adventures were written by Kingsley Amis (pseudonym "Robert Markham"), John Pearson, John Gardner, Raymond Benson, and Charlie Higson; in addition, Christopher Wood wrote two screenplay novelisations and other authors have also written ...

Including:

Read more here: » James Bond: Encyclopedia - James Bond

bonds: Encyclopedia - Brooke Bond

Brooke Bond was a brand-name tea retailer in the United Kingdom. In the 1950s and 1960s, packets of Brooke Bond tea included illustrated tea cards, usually 50 in a series, which were collected by many children. One of the most famous illustrators of these cards was Charles Tunnicliffe, the internationally aclaimed bird painter. Most of the initial series were wildlife-based, including 'British Wild Animals', 'British Wild Flowers', 'African Wild Life', 'Asian Wild Life', and 'Tropical Birds'. From the late 1960s, they included histori ...

Read more here: » Brooke Bond: Encyclopedia - Brooke Bond

bonds: Encyclopedia - Valence bond theory

The valence bond theory considers that the overlapping atomic orbitals of the participating atoms form a chemical bond. Due to the overlapping, it is most probable that electrons should be in the bond region. Valence bond theory views bonds as weakly coupled orbitals (small overlap). Valence bond theory is typically easier to employ in ground state molecules. The overlapping atomic orbitals can be of different types. There are two different types of overlapping orbitals: sigma and pi. Sigma bonds occur when the orbitals of two ...

Read more here: » Valence bond theory: Encyclopedia - Valence bond theory

bonds: Encyclopedia - Coordinate covalent bond

A coordinate covalent bond (also known as dative covalent bond) is a special type of covalent bond in which the shared electrons come from one of the atoms only. Once the bond has been formed, its strength is no different from that of a covalent bond. Coordinate covalent bonds are formed when a Lewis base (an electron donor or giver) donates a pair of electrons to a Lewis acid (an electron accepter) and the resultant compound is then called an adduct (a compound formed by the addition reaction between two molecules). The ...

Read more here: » Coordinate covalent bond: Encyclopedia - Coordinate covalent bond

bonds: Encyclopedia II - Municipal bond - Characteristics of municipal bonds

Municipal bond - Taxability. One of the primary reasons municipal bonds are considered separately from other types of bonds is their special ability to provide tax-exempt income. Interest paid by the issuer to bond holders is often exempt from all federal taxes, as well as state or local taxes depending on the state in which the issuer is located, subject to certain restrictions. Bonds is ...

See also:

Municipal bond, Municipal bond - Purpose of municipal bonds, Municipal bond - Municipal bond issuers, Municipal bond - Municipal bond holders, Municipal bond - Characteristics of municipal bonds, Municipal bond - Taxability, Municipal bond - Risk, Municipal bond - Comparison to corporate bonds

Read more here: » Municipal bond: Encyclopedia II - Municipal bond - Characteristics of municipal bonds

bonds: Encyclopedia - Church of the Universal Bond

The Church of the Universal Bond was a religious group founded in Britain in the early twentieth century by George W MacGregor Reid, promoting socialist revolution, anti-imperialism and sun worship. Initially aligned with Zoroastrianism, by 1912, Reid was becoming more attracted to Druidry, especially as Stonehenge was at the time being seen as a solar temple. His church began holding rituals there and their worship was ...

Including:

Read more here: » Church of the Universal Bond: Encyclopedia - Church of the Universal Bond

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