40) Over the Past Three Months, How Has the Duration and Persistence of Mark and Collateral Disputes with Clients of Each of the Following Types Changed?| A. Dealers and Other Financial Intermediaries. | Answer Type: Increased Considerably

ALLQ40AICNR • Economic Data from Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)

Latest Value

0.00

Year-over-Year Change

-100.00%

Date Range

10/1/2011 - 1/1/2025

Summary

Measures duration and persistence of mark and collateral disputes with dealers and financial intermediaries. Provides critical market interaction insights.

Analysis & Context

This economic indicator provides valuable insights into current market conditions and economic trends. The data is updated regularly by the Federal Reserve and represents one of the most reliable sources for economic analysis.

Understanding this metric helps economists, policymakers, and investors make informed decisions about economic conditions and future trends. The interactive chart above allows you to explore historical patterns and identify key trends over time.

About This Dataset

This trend evaluates dispute characteristics in financial transactions with dealers and intermediaries. Helps understand market friction complexity.

Methodology

Collected through systematic financial sector survey reporting mechanisms.

Historical Context

Used by financial regulators to assess market interaction dynamics.

Key Facts

  • Tracks dispute duration with financial intermediaries
  • Indicates market interaction complexity
  • Signals potential transactional challenges

FAQs

Q: What does this economic indicator measure?

A: Tracks duration and persistence of mark and collateral disputes with dealers and financial intermediaries.

Q: Why are these dispute metrics significant?

A: They reveal potential systemic challenges in financial market interactions and transaction processes.

Q: How frequently is this data updated?

A: Typically updated quarterly through comprehensive financial surveys.

Q: What can increased dispute persistence indicate?

A: Potential structural challenges in financial transaction resolution and communication.

Q: Who monitors these economic trends?

A: Financial regulators, risk managers, and market analysts use this data for insights.

Related Trends

70) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which Cmbs Are Funded Changed?| A. Terms for Average Clients | 1. Maximum Amount of Funding. | Answer Type: Eased Somewhat

ALLQ70A1ESNR

74) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which Consumer ABS (for Example, Backed by Credit Card Receivables or Auto Loans) Are Funded Changed?| B. Terms for Most Favored Clients, as a Consequence of Breadth, Duration And/or Extent of Relationship | 4. Collateral Spreads Over Relevant Benchmark (Effective Financing Rates). | Answer Type: Eased Somewhat

SFQ74B4ESNR

39) Over the Past Three Months, How Has the Volume of Mark and Collateral Disputes with Clients of Each of the Following Types Changed?| F. Separately Managed Accounts Established with Investment Advisers. | Answer Type: Decreased Somewhat

CTQ39FDSNR

25) To the Extent That the Price or Nonprice Terms Applied to Insurance Companies Have Tightened or Eased Over the Past Three Months (as Reflected in Your Responses to Questions 23 and 24), What Are the Most Important Reasons for the Change?| B. Possible Reasons for Easing | 3. Adoption of Less-Stringent Market Conventions (That Is, Collateral Terms and Agreements, ISDA Protocols). | Answer Type: 2nd Most Important

CTQ25B32MINR

40) Over the Past Three Months, How Has the Duration and Persistence of Mark and Collateral Disputes with Clients of Each of the Following Types Changed?| D. Mutual Funds, Etfs, Pension Plans, and Endowments. | Answer Type: Increased Somewhat

ALLQ40DISNR

62) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which Agency Rmbs Are Funded Changed?| B. Terms for Most Favored Clients, as a Consequence of Breadth, Duration And/or Extent of Relationship | 3. Haircuts. | Answer Type: Remained Basically Unchanged

ALLQ62B3RBUNR

Citation

U.S. Federal Reserve, Mark and Collateral Disputes (ALLQ40AICNR), retrieved from FRED.