Fixed Income Clearing Corporation (FICC)

  

See: DTCC.

Fixed Income Clearing Corporation is one of those names that completely and blandly describes an organization, like the United States of America (USA) or the Organization of Lonely Bird Watchers Who Secretly Wish They Were Doing Anything Else Besides Watching Birds (OLBWWSWTWDAEBWB).

Let's break down the obvious name that makes up the FICC. Fixed income investments consist of securities that provide a fixed return...bonds, mostly. Clearing includes all the activities it takes to close a transaction...the boring "i" dotting and "t" crossing that goes on behind the scenes when you click "execute" on your trading platform.

So the Fixed Income Clearing Corporation is a corporation that provides clearing for fixed income securities. Treasury-and-mortgage-backed securities represent examples of its main business lines.

The company itself formed in 2003 through the merger of the Mortgage-Backed Security Clearing Corporation (MBSCC) and the Government Securities Clearing Corporation (GSCC).

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finance a la shmoop. what are high-yield or junk bonds? alright well here are low

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yield bonds, you know Apple Microsoft you know, safe secure sleep [charts]

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like a baby even for Chicken Little those kind of bonds. the sky is not

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why do high-yield bonds yield a lot that is they pay a lot of interest to

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investors why do they do that answer because they have to. right but

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why why do they have to? well because the bonds are risky either the business is

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in danger of dying, or the business has borrowed so much money that it's in [ best buy pictured]

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weak backing and so the boatloads of bonds sank and ended up as basically

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junk. and not the Chinese junk that actually sales, a different kind of junk.

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anyway unlike your fancy triple-a bonds which you can see here on this lovely [ boat sails on a lake]

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bloody nose. so what's the best way to encourage people to do risky possibly

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