African

African(s) may refer to:

  • Anything from or pertaining to Africa:
  • African people, people who live in Africa or trace their ancestry to indigenous inhabitants of Africa
  • Ethnic groups of Africa
  • African cuisine
  • African culture
  • African languages
  • African music
  • African grey parrot, an Old World parrot
  • Books and radio

  • The African (short story), autobiographical story by French author J. M. G. Le Clézio
  • The Africans (radio program)
  • Music

  • "African" a song by Peter Tosh from his 1977 album Equal Rights (album)
  • The Africans (band)
  • Publishing

  • African Business, a monthly magazine covering business events across Africa
  • African Communist, a political magazine published in Johannesburg
  • African Film (magazine), Nigerian weekly magazine
  • See also

  • All pages with titles containing African
  • Africana (disambiguation)
  • Market

    Market may refer to:

  • Market (economics)
  • Market (place), a physical marketplace or public market
  • Market economy
  • Märket, an island shared by Finland and Sweden
  • Art, entertainment, and media

    Film

  • Market (1965 film), 1965 South Korean film
  • Market (2003 film), 2003 Hindi film
  • The Market: A Tale of Trade, a Turkish film
  • Television

  • The Market (TV series), a New Zealand television drama
  • Brand or enterprise

  • The Market (company), a Farm Fresh Supermarket concept store
  • The Market, a specialized Safeway store
  • Types of economic markets

  • Agricultural marketing
  • Emerging market
  • Financial market
  • Foreign exchange market
  • Grey market
  • Media market
  • Niche market
  • Open market, a free trade economy; the antonym of closed market
  • Prediction market
  • Real estate market
  • Stock market
  • Wholesale marketing
  • Aspects of economic markets

  • Efficient-market hypothesis
  • Mark-to-market accounting
  • Market capitalization
  • Market economy
  • Market failure
  • Market maker
  • Market microstructure
  • Market research
  • Market segment
  • Market share
  • Market trend
  • Market value
  • Single market
  • Target market
  • Customer

    A customer (sometimes known as a client, buyer, or purchaser) is the recipient of a Good or a service, or a product, or an idea, obtained from a seller, vendor, or supplier via a financial transaction or exchange for money or some other valuable consideration. Etymologically, a client is someone merely inclined to do business, whereas a purchaser procures goods or services on occasion but a customer customarily or habitually engages in transactions. This distinction is merely historic. Today customers are generally categorized into two types:

  • An entrepreneur' or trader (sometimes a commercial Intermediary) who is a dealer that purchases goods for re-sale.
  • An end user or ultimate customer who does not re-sell the things bought but is the actual consumer or an agent such as a Purchasing officer for the consumer.
  • A customer may or may not also be a consumer, but the two notions are distinct, even though the terms are commonly confused. A customer purchases goods; a consumer uses them. An ultimate customer may be a consumer as well, but just as equally may have purchased items for someone else to consume. An intermediate customer is not a consumer at all. The situation is somewhat complicated in that ultimate customers of so-called industrial goods and services (who are entities such as government bodies, manufacturers, and educational and medical institutions) either themselves use up the goods and services that they buy, or incorporate them into other finished products, and so are technically consumers, too. However, they are rarely called that, but are rather called industrial customers or business-to-business customers. Similarly, customers who buy services rather than goods are rarely called consumers.

    Financial market

    A financial market is a market in which people trade financial securities, commodities, and other fungible items of value at low transaction costs and at prices that reflect supply and demand. Securities include stocks and bonds, and commodities include precious metals or agricultural products.

    In economics, typically, the term market means the aggregate of possible buyers and sellers of a certain good or service and the transactions between them.

    The term "market" is sometimes used for what are more strictly exchanges, organizations that facilitate the trade in financial securities, e.g., a stock exchange or commodity exchange. This may be a physical location (like the NYSE, BSE, NSE) or an electronic system (like NASDAQ). Much trading of stocks takes place on an exchange; still, corporate actions (merger, spinoff) are outside an exchange, while any two companies or people, for whatever reason, may agree to sell stock from the one to the other without using an exchange.

    Trading of currencies and bonds is largely on a bilateral basis, although some bonds trade on a stock exchange, and people are building electronic systems for these as well, similar to stock exchanges.

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