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Does anyone have a reference for the proposition that a "Full Corporate Offer" is a "fictitious/fraudulent contract, typically for 'metric tonne' gold / oil deals, typically involving 'Swiss Procedure'"? Bongomatic 08:00, 23 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • who put in the the joke that a Full Corporate Offer is "fictitious/fraudulent contract"??? that is definitely not the case! a Full Corporate Offer is a standard business practice for all corporation in the resource market- together with a ICPO (Irrevocable Corporate Purchase Order), a BGL (Bank Guarantee Letter) and a LOI (Letter of Intent) it is a basic term in modern business = business over electronic exchanges. a varation herefo is the FSCO Full Secret Corporate Offer and so on and on - to say that a FCO is a "fictitious/fraudulent contract" is wrong and ludicrous - companies like Gazprom, AngloAmerican or Banco Santander use FCO all the time (I work in this field!). A LOI to a company will result in a FCO being issued, which is a binding offer and can be signed by the counter-party in the deal, which then has to issue the ICPO with a BGL to make the deal happen. very simple and done daily thousands of times and by the way "Swiss Procedure" I have never heard of that one until now... in my opinion that should be removed too. --noclador (talk) 20:30, 26 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]
    • and have a look at the edits of the person that added this nonsense to wikipedia: 87.74.63.103 --noclador (talk) 20:36, 26 November 2009 (UTC)""[reply]
      • btw. sure on google you only will find fraudulent FCOs - which serious corporation will post its business contracts online??? not one- also normally a FCO is secret (to be distributed only among the parties involved) and valid for a maximum of 3 to 20 days (the 3 days for goods traded on exchanges). so- on google fake FCOs - between serious business groups a daily and approved business practice. --noclador (talk) 20:41, 26 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Full Corporate Offer

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As the editor who cares to look will see, there is no reference to "Full Corporate Offer" in reliable sources that obviously supports any particular definition of the term:

Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs· FENS · JSTOR · TWL

Note in particular the lack of references to the term in books—particularly dictionaries of business or finance terminology. A WP:DICTDEF masquerading as a (red) dablink has existed since January 2, 2007. The definition comported with a cursory inspection of available online sources. Now the definition here (the wrong place) has been changed on several occasion to a meaning unsupported by any references whatsoever. I propose deleting the red dablink (and definition) pending the creation of a referenced article on the term. Bongomatic 12:35, 27 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Fire Control Officer

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This also another abbreviation for FCO. It's used in the military, for example someone in an AC130.--Bluesoju (talk) 16:14, 20 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]