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?| E. Insurance Companies. | Answer Type: Decreased Somewhat

CTQ40EDSNR • Economic Data from Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)

Latest Value

1.00

Year-over-Year Change

0.00%

Date Range

10/1/2011 - 4/1/2025

Summary

Measures changes in duration and persistence of mark and collateral disputes with insurance companies. Provides insights into financial service interaction complexities.

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 how dispute characteristics evolve in interactions between financial entities and insurance companies. It reflects relationship dynamics.

Methodology

Survey-based data collection tracking dispute length and persistence.

Historical Context

Used by insurers and regulators to assess financial interaction quality.

Key Facts

  • Tracks dispute characteristics with insurance companies
  • Quarterly measurement of dispute dynamics
  • Indicates financial relationship complexity

FAQs

Q: What does 'Decreased Somewhat' indicate?

A: Suggests a reduction in dispute duration or complexity with insurance companies during the reporting period.

Q: Why monitor these dispute characteristics?

A: Helps understand evolving financial service interactions and potential regulatory concerns.

Q: How are these disputes measured?

A: Through systematic surveys of financial institutions and insurance companies.

Q: Who benefits from this data?

A: Regulators, insurance companies, and financial service providers use these insights.

Q: What does mark and collateral dispute mean?

A: Disagreements about asset valuation or contractual terms between financial entities.

Related Trends

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

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46) Over the Past Three Months, How Have Initial Margin Requirements Set by Your Institution with Respect to Otc Credit Derivatives Referencing Securitized Products (Such as Specific Abs or Mbs Tranches and Associated Indexes) Changed?| B. Initial Margin Requirements for Most Favored Clients, as a Consequence of Breadth, Duration, And/or Extent of Relationship. | Answer Type: Increased Somewhat

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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 Somewhat

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15) Considering the Entire Range of Transactions Facilitated by Your Institution for Such Clients, How Has the Use of Financial Leverage by Trading Reits Changed over the Past Three Months?| Answer Type: Decreased Considerably

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66) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which Non-Agency Rmbs 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: Remained Basically Unchanged

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Citation

U.S. Federal Reserve, Mark and Collateral Disputes (CTQ40EDSNR), retrieved from FRED.