13) To the Extent That the Price or Nonprice Terms Applied to Trading Reits Have Tightened or Eased over the Past Three Months (as Reflected in Your Responses to Questions 11 and 12), What Are the Most Important Reasons for the Change?| A. Possible Reasons for Tightening | 3. Adoption of More-Stringent Market Conventions (That is, Collateral Terms and Agreements, Isda Protocols). | Answer Type: 2nd Most Important

ALLQ13A32MINR • Economic Data from Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)

Latest Value

0.00

Year-over-Year Change

N/A%

Date Range

1/1/2012 - 1/1/2025

Summary

Tracks market convention changes in trading REITs. Provides insights into evolving financial market standards and regulatory practices.

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 metric evaluates the adoption of more stringent market conventions in Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) trading. It reflects industry-wide regulatory and operational shifts.

Methodology

Calculated through quarterly survey responses about market convention changes.

Historical Context

Used by financial regulators and REIT market participants to understand trading environment.

Key Facts

  • Measures REIT trading standard changes
  • Indicates regulatory trend shifts
  • Reflects market adaptation mechanisms

FAQs

Q: What are market conventions in REIT trading?

A: Market conventions include standardized trading terms, collateral agreements, and regulatory protocols.

Q: Why do market conventions change?

A: Changes occur due to regulatory updates, risk management, and market efficiency improvements.

Q: How frequently are these conventions updated?

A: Conventions can change quarterly or annually based on market and regulatory developments.

Q: Who determines these market conventions?

A: Financial regulators, industry associations, and market participants collaboratively develop conventions.

Q: What impact do convention changes have?

A: Changes can affect trading costs, risk management, and overall market transparency.

Related Trends

34) How Has the Provision of Differential Terms by Your Institution to Separately Managed Accounts Established with Most-Favored (as a Function of Breadth, Duration, and Extent of Relationship) Investment Advisers Changed Over the Past Three Months?| Answer Type: Decreased Somewhat

CTQ34DSNR

56) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which High-Yield Corporate Bonds 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

SFQ56B4ESNR

56) Over the Past Three Months, How Have the Terms Under Which High-Yield Corporate Bonds Are Funded Changed?| A. Terms for Average Clients | 3. Haircuts. | Answer Type: Tightened Considerably

SFQ56A3TCNR

19) To the Extent That the Price or Nonprice Terms Applied to Mutual Funds, ETFs, Pension Plans, and Endowments Have Tightened or Eased Over the Past Three Months (as Reflected in Your Responses to Questions 17 and 18), 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

CTQ19B32MINR

38) How Has the Intensity of Efforts by Nonfinancial Corporations to Negotiate More Favorable Price and Nonprice Terms Changed over the Past Three Months?| Answer Type: Increased Considerably

ALLQ38ICNR

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 | 2. Maximum Maturity. | Answer Type: Remained Basically Unchanged

ALLQ66B2RBUNR

Citation

U.S. Federal Reserve, REIT Market Conventions (ALLQ13A32MINR), retrieved from FRED.