Derivative [adjective]
Definition of Derivative:
borrowed, transmitted from source
Synonyms of Derivative:
Sentence/Example of Derivative:
Roni Israelov, the President of investment firm Ndvr and the author of several academic papers on derivatives, says 2020 has brought a big uptick in options contracts for individual stocks.
Indeed, Randy Frederick, Charles Schwab’s vice president of trading and derivatives, argues the latest tech correction can largely be chalked up to, “without a doubt, the fact that things had gotten very, very expensive.”
The Financial Times, Wall Street Journal and Zero Hedge reported that SoftBank was making massive bets on technology stocks using equity derivatives.
The FT later reported that SoftBank is sitting on trading gains of about $4 billion from founder Masayoshi Son’s bets on equity derivatives, citing people with direct knowledge of the matter.
These are derivative contracts that an investor, usually an insurance company, can buy as a way of further hedging their risks from natural disasters.
The music publishers owned the lyrics, not Genius, which had created a “derivative work” under copyright law.
Currently, rapamycin derivatives are widely used for immunosuppression in organ and bone marrow transplants.
Those who hold that the species were the basis of the ancient Modes or harmoniai must regard the keys as derivative.
The derivative law in this case depends not solely on laws, but on a collocation; and collocations cannot be reduced to any law.
In the example in question, we know the causes on which the derivative uniformity depends.