12) Over the Past Three Months, How Has Your Use of Nonprice Terms (for Example, Haircuts, Maximum Maturity, Covenants, Cure Periods, Cross-Default Provisions or Other Documentation Features) with Respect to Trading Reits Across the Entire Spectrum of Securities Financing and Otc Derivatives Transaction Types Changed, Regardless of Price Terms?| Answer Type: Eased Considerably

Number of Respondents, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted

CTQ12ECNR • Economic Data from Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)

Latest Value

0.00

Year-over-Year Change

N/A%

Date Range

7/1/2011 - 4/1/2025

Summary

Tracks quarterly survey respondent count for economic research. Provides critical insight into data collection and statistical sampling methodology.

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 represents the total number of participants in quarterly economic surveys. It helps researchers assess data reliability and representativeness.

Methodology

Calculated by counting unique survey participants during each quarterly reporting period.

Historical Context

Used by economists to validate statistical significance of economic research findings.

Key Facts

  • Quarterly tracking of survey participation
  • Critical for statistical validity
  • Indicates research sample size

FAQs

Q: What does the CTQ12ECNR series measure?

A: It tracks the number of survey respondents in quarterly economic research. Helps validate data collection methods.

Q: Why are respondent numbers important?

A: Large, diverse sample sizes increase research reliability and statistical significance of economic findings.

Q: How often is this data updated?

A: The series is updated quarterly with the latest survey participation numbers.

Q: Can respondent numbers change research conclusions?

A: Sample size directly impacts statistical confidence and potential generalizability of economic research.

Q: Are there limitations to this metric?

A: Respondent count alone doesn't guarantee research quality; methodology and participant diversity matter.

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Citation

U.S. Federal Reserve, Number of Respondents (CTQ12ECNR), retrieved from FRED.