Credit risk Floating-rate notes issued by corporations, such as banks and financial firms, are subject to
credit risk, depending on the credit-worthiness of the issuer. Those issued by the
U.S. Treasury, which entered the market in 2014, are traditionally regarded as having minimal credit risk.
Interest rate risk Opinion is divided as to the efficacy of floating-rate notes in protecting the investor from
interest rate risk. Some believe that these securities carry little
interest rate risk Complexity Commenting on the complexity of these securities, Richard S. Wilson of the credit rating firm Fitch Investors Services noted: "Financial engineers worked overtime on floating-rate securities and have created debt instruments with a variety of terms and features different from those of conventional fixed-coupon bonds....The major investment firms with their worldwide trading capabilities participate in these markets 24 hours a day. But floaters are complex instruments, and investors who don't understand them should stay away. This applies to individuals as well as institutional portfolio managers." ==Trading==