Definitions for "Structuring"
The process of pulling together the many components of a lease. Structuring includes, but is not limited to, lease pricing, end-of-term options, documentation issues, funding, and residual valuations.
Pulling together the many components of a lease to arrive at a single lease transaction. Structuring includes, but is not limited to, lease pricing, end-of-term options, documentation issues, indemnification clauses, funding and residual valuations.
Organizing your paraphrase of the argument so as to make its logical form as obvious as possible. This typically requires two procedures: translating stylistic variants into the standard constants, and matching the wording of statements, names, or predicates when they are expressed more than once in slightly different language.
A verb describing the process of experimenting with various combinations of mortgages and security classes to achieve the highest price for a CMBS based upon capital market forces at that moment.
Structuring is a division of Global Financing which consists of a group of specialist product teams sub-divided into four product areas: tax, conduits, structured bond issues and asset back securities. As a Business Area, Structuring involves developing new products to meet client requirements using high-level quantitative skills to create sophisticated solutions.
The operation of imposing an order or organization on a set of information. For example, structuring could be carried out by clustering or by extracting information from a document and putting it into a schema or by grouping documents into piles.