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: Remained Basically Unchanged

CTQ40DRBUNR • Economic Data from Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)

Latest Value

19.00

Year-over-Year Change

11.76%

Date Range

10/1/2011 - 4/1/2025

Summary

Tracks changes in mark and collateral dispute duration for mutual funds, ETFs, pension plans, and endowments. Provides insight into financial market dispute resolution stability.

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 measures the persistence and duration of client-related disputes in financial transactions. It helps assess market friction and institutional relationship dynamics.

Methodology

Survey-based data collection from financial institutions tracking dispute characteristics.

Historical Context

Used by regulators and financial analysts to monitor market transaction smoothness.

Key Facts

  • Tracks dispute duration across financial institutions
  • Focuses on mutual funds and pension entities
  • Indicates market transaction stability

FAQs

Q: What does this economic indicator measure?

A: It tracks changes in mark and collateral dispute duration for financial institutions. Helps understand market transaction smoothness.

Q: Why are mark and collateral disputes important?

A: They reveal potential friction in financial transactions and institutional relationships. Indicate market efficiency.

Q: How often is this data updated?

A: Typically collected quarterly through institutional surveys. Provides current market insights.

Q: Who uses this economic data?

A: Regulators, financial analysts, and institutional investors use this to assess market conditions.

Q: What does 'remained basically unchanged' mean?

A: Suggests stable dispute characteristics with minimal variation in the past three months.

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Citation

U.S. Federal Reserve, Mark and Collateral Disputes (CTQ40DRBUNR), retrieved from FRED.