vague de fond - meaning and definition. What is vague de fond
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What (who) is vague de fond - definition

TYPE OF INVESTMENT FUNDS IN FRENCH-SPEAKING COUNTRIES OF EUROPE
Fond commun de placement

Vague topology         
Vague convergence; Vaguely convergent
In mathematics, particularly in the area of functional analysis and topological vector spaces, the vague topology is an example of the weak-* topology which arises in the study of measures on locally compact Hausdorff spaces.
Ae Fond Kiss         
  • The first line on a memorial plaque
  • Grave of "Clarinda" in [[Canongate Kirkyard]]
SONG BY ROBERT BURNS
Ae fond kiss; Ae Fond Kiss, and Then We Sever; Ae fond kiss and then we sever
The Scots song "Ae fond kiss and then we sever" by the Scottish poet Robert Burns is more commonly known as "Ae fond kiss". It is Burns' most recorded love song.
A Fond Husband         
1677 COMEDY PLAY BY THE ENGLISH WRITER THOMAS D'URFEY
The Fond Husband
A Fond Husband; Or, The Plotting Sisters also known as The Fond Husband is a 1677 comedy play by the English writer Thomas D'Urfey. It was first staged by the Duke's Company at London's Dorset Garden Theatre with a cast that included William Smith as Rashley, Henry Harris as Ranger, James Nokes as Peregrine Bubble, Anthony Leigh as Old Fumble, Samuel Sandford as Sir Roger Petulant, Thomas Jevon as Sneak, John Richards as Spatterdash, Thomas Percival as Apothecary, Elizabeth Barry as Emillia, Rebecca Marshall as Maria and Margaret Hughes as Cordelia.

Wikipedia

Fonds commun de placement

Fonds commun de placement translates to "investment funds" or "mutual funds", and are open-ended collective investment funds based that are neither trust or company law based. They are similar to common contractual funds in Ireland, tax transparent funds in the UK and "fondsen voor gemene rekening" in the Netherlands.

In France, commonly referred to as FCP or F.C.P., these financial instruments are collective investments that are similar to the SICAV. They are not investment companies; they are more like open partnerships. They have no independent legal status but exist as a set of defined relationships between investors, managers and custodian. They invest in different financial instruments, but they do not have the tax status of the SICAV.

They are typically issued in the French-speaking countries of Europe.