Auction Rate Security - ARS
  
Most securities - we're talking debt investments like bonds - have a set interest rate. A 10-year bond might have a rate of, say, 3%. That rate is typically locked in at the time the security is issued, meaning the investor will continue to get 3% each year for the duration of the bond, no matter what happens to the interest rate markets.
Auction rate securities act differently. Instead of having interest rates permanently set, the rates are re-set through periodic auctions. When the auctions actually happened (yes, they stopped happening at one point, but more on that in a second), they took place at relatively short intervals - 7, 14, 28 or 35 days in most cases.
Auction rate securities were invented in the 1980s and things went well until the financial crisis of 2007 to 2008. By 2007, trouble in the financial markets led some auctions to fail due to lack of bidders. Eventually, the market collapsed altogether. By February 2008, ARS couldn't even find underwriters to conduct the auctions in the first place.
Eventually, federal and certain state authorities reached a deal to buy back some ARS in an effort to unfreeze the market. However, according to a report in Barron's, there were still $5 billion of the securities held by investors in 2015.
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Finance: What is an Auction Market?13 Views
Finance a la shmoop... what is an auction market.. next up on the block [Man speaking on stage]
we've got stock in the company comb Depot....
okay yeah so the New York
Stock Exchange is an auction market and you have no idea how much caffeine I had [Man holding a monster energy drink]
to have to get that right which means that the prices on the new york stock
exchange happen during a bidding process we're matching offers get you know [People frantically rushing to bid for stocks]
matched... buyers and sellers buy and sell at the
same time so in essence two transactions are happening at once the opposite of
this sort of market is the over the counter or OTC market where dealers are
the ones holding all the cards and they ultimately determine the price by [Dealer with the cards]
creating a spread from where they're willing to sell your shares and what
price they'll pay to buy your shares but in an OTC market well you don't get to [Dogs running side by side]
feel like you're watching the last leg of a greyhound race so you don't get all
my caffeinated auction talk there which is kind of cool we like that, right..right?
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