Syndication [
ˌsindi'keiʃən]
n. 辛迪加组织(组织辛迪加)
syndication[ noun ]- organizing into or administering as a syndicate
<noun.act>
- selling (an article or cartoon) for publication in many magazines or newspapers at the same time
<noun.act>
he received a comfortable income from the syndication of his work
Syndication \Syn`di*ca"tion\, n.
Act or process of syndicating or forming a syndicate.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]
- And what Carsey and other Hollywood independents want is for the FCC to implement the Financial Interest & Syndication Rules of 1970 _ which prohibit broadcast networks from owning financial interests in their programs _ in the cable industry.
- Syndication specialists said SAS paid a generous enough yield to offset any concerns about its lack of rating.
- The Coalition to Preserve the Financial Interest and Syndication Rule, which represents program producers, said the Barrett plan appears to be a "significant deregulatory step."
- Syndication with UK and Japanese commercial banks will follow.
- The FCC, as well as the Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department, called for repeal of the so-called Financial Interest and Syndication Rule in 1983 as an antiquated regulatory practice.
- Syndication by Credit Suisse First Boston Ltd. of only the fourth "plain vanilla" floating-rate note this year was one of the few significant events during a generally quiet day.
- A majority was prepared to vote to ease the so-called Financial Interest and Syndication Rules, but the commission would have required stringent safeguards to prevent anti-competitive behavior by networks.
- Syndication specialists predicted this week's issuance signals the beginning of a run of new warrant issues.
- But the talks have reached an impasse, the Coalition to Preserve the Financial Interest and Syndication Rules said.
- Syndication activity also was subdued.