Trade Journal definition

Trade Journal means a newspaper or journal circulating among such persons or bodies as undertake Contracts of the category for which tenders are to be invited.

Examples of Trade Journal in a sentence

  • Director General, Indian Trade Journal, Kolkata for publication on Newspaper.

  • The preferred publication for the advertisement of construction and A&E procurements is the County Trade Journal.

  • Advertisement in such case should be given in the Indian Trade Journal (ITJ), published by the Director General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics, Kolkata and at least in one national daily having wide circulation.

  • It should also have its website address in the advertisements in Indian Trade Journal and Newspapers.

  • Advertisement in such case should be given in the Indian Trade Journal (ITJ), published by the Director General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics, Kolkata and at least in one national daily having wide circulation.(ii) An organisation having its own web site should also publish all its advertised tender enquiries on the web site and provide a link with NIC web site.

  • The above details are also available on BRO website CPPP site https://eprocure.gov.in/eprocure/app and Indian Trade Journal.

  • Open tender notifications should be sent to the Director General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics, Kolkata for publication in the Indian Trade Journal (ITJ) and to the DAVP, New Delhi for publication at least in one leading daily, which has a wide circulation.

  • Notice regarding issue of this RFQ will also be published in two national news papers and the Indian Trade Journal, Kolkata.

  • Sd/-DirectorMedical & Public Health Services/ Member Secretary (RKS) “Tel.No.0260-2642940, 2642961”email ID : svbch.sil@gmail.com Copy to :-1) CPO, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, Silvassa for wide publicity in Newspaper.2) Director General, Indian Trade Journal, Kolkata for publication on Newspaper.3) I.T. Department, D&NH, Silvassa with a request to publish in Website.

  • Open tender notifications should be sent to the Director General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics,Kolkata for publication in the Indian Trade Journal (ITJ) and to the DAVP, New Delhi for publication at least in one leading daily, which has a wide circulation.

Related to Trade Journal

  • Journal means the official Journal of the European Union or successor publication thereto.

  • Student journalist means a student who gathers, writes, edits, photographs, records, video tapes, or prepares information for dissemination in student media.

  • Official Journal means the Official Journal of the European Union;

  • Real-Time Market has the meaning set forth in the CAISO Tariff.

  • Financial Markets means international financial markets in which currency and other financial assets exchange rates are determined in multi-party trade.

  • Working Day means a day (other than a Saturday or Sunday) on which banks are open for general business in the City of London.

  • published market means, for a class of securities, a marketplace on which the securities have traded that discloses regularly in a publication of general and regular paid circulation or in a form that is broadly distributed by electronic means the prices at which those securities have traded;

  • Bloomberg Screen SOFRRATE Page means the Bloomberg screen designated “SOFRRATE” or any successor page or service;

  • Publication Date means an Ordinary Publication Date or an Extraordinary Publication Date, as the case may be.

  • London Business Day means any Business Day on which dealings in deposits in United States Dollars are transacted in the London interbank market.

  • Bloomberg means Bloomberg Financial Markets.

  • Benchmark Rate means, with respect to any Redemption Date, the rate per annum equal to the annual equivalent yield to maturity or interpolated maturity of the Comparable Benchmark Issue (as defined below), assuming a price for the Comparable Benchmark Issue (expressed as a percentage of its principal amount) equal to the Comparable Benchmark Price for such Redemption Date.

  • Real-time Energy Market means the purchase or sale of energy and payment of Transmission Congestion Charges for quantity deviations from the Day-ahead Energy Market in the Operating Day.

  • LIBOR Market Index Rate means, for any day, the rate for one-month U.S. dollar deposits as reported on Telerate Page 3750 as of 11:00 a.m., London time, for such day, provided, if such day is not a LIBOR Business Day, the immediately preceding LIBOR Business Day (or if not so reported, then as determined by the Swingline Lender from another recognized source or interbank quotation).

  • Published means, unless the context requires otherwise,

  • Bloomberg Screen means the Bloomberg Information contained in the Bloomberg screen identified in Schedule 3 hereto and filed with the Commission as a Free Writing Prospectus on , 20 .]

  • Real-time System Energy Price means the System Energy Price resulting from the Office of the Interconnection’s dispatch of the PJM Interchange Energy Market in the Operating Day.

  • Price Index means the "Consumer Price Index" published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor, All Items. New York, N.Y.--Northeastern, N.J., all urban consumers (presently denominated "CPI-U"), or a successor or substitute index appropriately adjusted. (iii) the term "Price Index for the Base Year" shall mean the average of the monthly All Items Price Indexes for each of the 12 months of the Base Year.

  • Publication NPC-207 means the Ministry draft technical publication “Impulse Vibration in Residential Buildings”, November 1983, supplementing the Model Municipal Noise Control By-Law, Final Report, August 1978, published by the Ministry.

  • Benchmark Gilt means, in respect of a Reset Period, such United Kingdom government security having a maturity date on or about the last day of such Reset Period as the Calculation Agent, with the advice of the Reference Banks, may determine to be appropriate;

  • Reuters Screen US PRIME 1 Page” means the display on the Reuter Monitor Money Rates Service (or any successor service) on the “US PRIME 1” page (or any other page as may replace that page on that service) for the purpose of displaying prime rates or base lending rates of major United States banks.