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fiduciary

/fi-doo-shee-er-ee, -dyoo-/US // fɪˈdu ʃiˌɛr i, -ˈdyu- //UK // (fɪˈduːʃɪərɪ) law //

受托人,受托者,信托人,受托

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural fi·du·ci·ar·ies.

    • : Law. a person to whom property or power is entrusted for the benefit of another: All investment advisors registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission must act as fiduciaries.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : Law. of or relating to the relationship of trust and good faith between a fiduciary and the person for whom the fiduciary acts: The executor of a will has a fiduciary duty to act in the best interest of the beneficiary.The banks do not assume any financial responsibility—they act in a fiduciary capacity only.The American Medical Association said that physicians have a fiduciary responsibility to patients.
    • : depending on public confidence for value or currency, as fiat money.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Other major fiduciaries include giant nonbanks like Vanguard, Fidelity, and BlackRock, none of which ever have ever faced a fine remotely as large.

  • Both measures would return banks to their traditional roles as objective providers of deposit, credit, payment, and fiduciary services.

  • Cherashore, a local hotel mogul, said the Water Authority has a “fiduciary duty” to further explore the pipeline and its costs.

  • These decision-makers think they have to choose between performance and diversity, when in fact they might actually be undermining their fiduciary responsibility by not prioritizing diversity and inclusion.

  • A data trust is a steward that manages people’s data on their behalf and has fiduciary duties toward its clients.

  • Those troublesome 65- and 66-year-olds, of course, raise not merely a fiduciary question, but a moral one.

  • The Quaker Friends Fiduciary Corporation also recently divested from Caterpillar.

  • So, no, I would not entrust my money to them, because it is clear that they do not feel any fiduciary responsibility to me.

  • So optimally the partner should be managing someone else's money—a so-called fiduciary institution, preferably a big pension fund.

  • Ruth Madoff's conduct included "fraudulent conveyances, breaches of fiduciary duties, conversions, and other wrongdoings."

  • For the young woman was very rich and Cicero had the care of her property, being left fiduciary heir.

  • That is just what Ludwig did offer—subsequently, however, backing it with a modest fiduciary bonus.

  • There is another kind of guardianship known as fiduciary guardianship, which arises in the following manner.

  • We now proceed to fiduciary bequests or trusts; and let us begin with trust inheritances.

  • I have placed arrows just for fiduciary marks so we can be looking at the same area.