1. mark to market - Noun
2. mark to market - Verb
mark to market (countable and uncountable, plural mark to markets)
Alternative spelling of mark-to-market
mark to market (third-person singular simple present marks to market, present participle marking to market, simple past and past participle marked to market)
(accounting, finance) To value an asset at its current actual or estimated market price.
mark-to-market (countable and uncountable, plural mark-to-markets)
(finance, accounting, chiefly attributive) Assigning a value to an asset equal to the current market price of the asset or one calculated based on related standardised assets for which there is a market.
mark-to-market
In addition, the increase in gross profit includes a $4 million benefit from unrealized mark-to-market adjustments related to commodity hedging contracts. Source: Internet
Other pension related costs including annual mark-to-market adjustments and actuarial gains and losses are excluded from Adjusted EBIT. Source: Internet
Reflects non-cash activity, including the unrealized losses (gains) on the mark-to-market of an equity method investment, investment losses (gains) and other non-cash impairments. Source: Internet
Capital Market fees of $61 million increased $18 million from first quarter, reflecting strong DCM activity and a $13 million mark-to-market recovery on loan trading assets. Source: Internet
This kind of “mark-to-market” tax at the federal level, and was featured in several Democratic presidential campaigns, but hasn’t ever been tried in the United States. Source: Internet
So would it be fair to say that the difference on this issue between you and your dad is that he wants to value the current GOP using mark-to-model and you are insisting on mark-to-market? Source: Internet