corporate trade

A Business man who messes with other men but no one would know by their appearance or talking to them. They most likely are married and have a family. They keep a kept man on the side.

Corporate Trade
I’m tired of working all the time , I need corporate trade, and not these street boys with no job!
by Vjamaal May 22, 2019
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Traded

When you don’t get an abbreviation or something that’s common sense or if your bet didn’t hit, it’s basically if someone makes you feel dumb you just say I’m traded.
“My bet didn’t hit fuck I’m traded

“Yo did you watch the nd game?”
“What’s nd”
Notre dame

“I’m traded”
by Balls16 January 10, 2025
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Traded

In a relationship where both people have already said I love you to each other
Keith: Yo bro Kawhi and Rosie gotta break up before Carmine starts something.

Cassius: it’s too late for them to break up, they’ve already traded bro.
by AppleButterz September 14, 2017
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Paint trade

It’s a gay phrase of accidentally shitting on the hot guy while doing the deed.
He definitely paint trade, he’s never bottomed.
I painted DL Trade all the time!
by Friendlyally March 01, 2025
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Trans Atlantic Potato Trade

The illegal trade of potatoes by the French after stealing the Irish's potatoes and reselling them to the Americans, who sold them back to the British. This caused a Market Crash in late 2023 in Ireland and Floptropica. Jiafei recently denied the accusations of being involved with the TAPT in a press conference with President Deborah Ali Williams.
Joe: Have you heard about the Trans Atlantic Potato Trade?

Xijemono: Has Jiafei said anything about it yet?

Joe: I hope she did. It could cause the value of potatoes to drop.
by TigreZaddz November 06, 2023
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carry trade

Carry trade is an investment consisting of borrowing at a low interest rate to invest in an asset providing a higher rate of return, typically for less than a year.

Carry trades often involve borrowing in hard currency (such as dollars, euros, british pounds, or yen) to invest in high-risk, high-interest notes issued by third world countries.

As these investments are typically not sustainable for the issuing country, most such carry trades are cashed out (re-converted into dollars) within a year - during which net returns of 10% to 50% can often be earned.
A disastrous carry trade developed in Argentina during the Macri presidency (2015-19), as both local and foreign investors took advantage of notes with annual yields averaging over 80%. The trick was re-converting the notes into dollars before the inevitable devaluations, in which the investment could lose 20% in a day.
by ruckman December 24, 2019
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