lcd panel index quotation
Index Price on a given date shall mean the weighted average (weighted in accordance with the factors listed above) of the closing prices of the companies composing the Index Group.
Treasury Index Rate means the average yield to maturity for actively traded marketable U.S. Treasury fixed interest rate securities having the same number of 30-day periods to maturity as the length of the applicable Dividend Period, determined, to the extent necessary, by linear interpolation based upon the yield for such securities having the next shorter and next longer number of 30-day periods to maturity treating all Dividend Periods with a length greater than the longest maturity for such securities as having a length equal to such longest maturity, in all cases based upon data set forth in the most recent weekly statistical release published by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (currently in H.15 (519)); provided, however, if the most recent such statistical release shall not have been published during the 15 days preceding the date of computation, the foregoing computations shall be based upon the average of comparable data as quoted to the Trust by at least three recognized dealers in U.S. government securities selected by the Trust.
Final Index Price means the average of the daily closing value of the Index for the twenty (20) consecutive trading days immediately preceding the Determination Date.
In the past decade, LCD monitors have replaced CRT screens for all but the most specialist applications. Although liquid crystal displays boast perfect
Modern markets have evolved into vastly complicated organisms with thousands of data points competing for attention. It"s our job to transform this information flood into an efficient set of charts, tickers, indexes, and indicators that support our profit objectives. Part of this task requires observation of broad market forces, while the balance demands a narrow focus on specific securities used to execute our strategies.
These images capture highlight methods to use screen space efficiently, regardless of the number of monitors used to watch the financial markets. The panels in these examples scale well when adding new screens, or when loading up a small laptop for travel. When pressed for space, reduce the number of charts and securities while keeping the entire set of indexes and indicators.
The top panel (1) highlights major benchmarks, showing detailed information on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, Russell 2000, and Nasdaq indexes. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures contracts sit at eye level so traders can watch in real-time during the market day. Open, high, low, and last data columns reveal how the current price is interacting with key levels, which also mark intraday support and resistance.
The center-left panel (2) deconstructs the Level 2 market depth screen, eliminating extraneous columns in favor of a streamlined view that displays just price and size. Market center data are no longer useful because the vast majority of intraday transactions never make it to this screen, due to high-frequency trading algorithms (HFT). The time and sales ticker on the right side has been reduced to core elements as well, showing just time, price and size.
The center-right panel (3) displays a simplified portfolio view for long-term positions. It isn"t required but is extremely useful when a position blows up and requires the trader"s attention. The lower panel (4) contains detailed information on open positions as well as securities being watched for entry. Price and percentage change measure intraday performance, while volume and average volume reveal activity level compared with prior sessions. Open, high, low, and last columns replace charts in many cases, allowing easy visualization of the daily pattern.
Top left (1) and top right (2) panels display scaled-down data on secondary ticker lists. These are compiled over time through news, scans, homework, media play and all the other ways we find interesting trade setups. Volume and average volume columns are especially important on these lists because they identify active securities in just a glance. The chart (3) links to tickers on all the panels through the green symbol on the upper left. Traders can also flip through time frames, from two-minute to monthly, by clicking on the top toolbar.
Top left (1) and center-left (2) panels display market internals and key indexes not shown on the first screen. Learning to interpret this background information correctly takes time, but the effort is worthwhile because it builds significant tape reading skills.
The top right (3) panel contains the same columns as other secondary lists but focuses on a specific market group … energy and commodities in this case. Finally, the bottom left (4) chart keeps a real-time VIX on display, while the bottom right chart (5) shows core security you’ll watch for years or decades.
TOKYO, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Panasonic maker Matsushitasaid it would spend 300 billion yen ($2.8 billion) to build an LCD panel plant in western Japan by 2010, as it bets heavily on both of the leading flat-panel technologies.
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co Ltd is the world’s largest plasma TV maker, controlling one-third of the market, but it remains outside the top five in the faster-growing liquid crystal display (LCD) TV business.
The Osaka-based consumer electronics maker"s move will pit it directly against LCD TV giants such as Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, Sony Corpand Sharp Corp.
The new plant will use so-called eighth-generation glass substrates and will have a maximum capacity equivalent to 15 million units of 32-inch LCD panels a year.
“At Matsushita, we will use a vertically integrated business model not only for plasma but for LCD to drive our mainstay flat TV businesses strongly,” Matsushita Managing Executive Officer Ken Morita told a news conference.
The decision to build its own LCD panel plant comes after the Osaka-based company’s LCD TV business was hit last year by a shortage of panel supplies.
In addition, Matsushita plans to buy the 50 percent stake in IPS Alpha and large LCD-related businesses held by Hitachi Displays for 66 billion yen in about two years.
Following the announcement, shares in Matsushita, which is switching its name to Panasonic on Oct. 1, closed down 1.3 percent at 2,295 yen, underperforming the Tokyo stock market"s electrical machinery index, which fell 0.2 percent. ($1=107.83 Yen) (Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Hugh Lawson)