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| Financial Terms | |
| Debt relief |
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Information about financial, finance, business, accounting, payroll, inventory, investment, money, inventory control, stock trading, financial advisor, tax advisor, credit.
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Definition of Debt relief
Debt reliefReducing the principal and/or interest payments on LDC loans.
Related Terms:Debt/equity ratioIndicator of financial leverage. Compares assets provided by creditors to assets providedby shareholders. Determined by dividing long-term debt by common stockholder equity. DebtMoney borrowed.Debt capacityAbility to borrow. The amount a firm can borrow up to the point where the firm value nolonger increases. Debt displacementThe amount of borrowing that leasing displaces. Firms that do a lot of leasing will beforced to cut back on borrowing. Debt instrumentAn asset requiring fixed dollar payments, such as a government or corporate bond.Debt leverageThe amplification of the return earned on equity when an investment or firm is financedpartially with borrowed money. Debt limitationA bond covenant that restricts in some way the firm's ability to incur additional indebtedness.
Debt marketThe market for trading debt instruments.Debt ratioTotal debt divided by total assets.Debt securitiesIOUs created through loan-type transactions - commercial paper, bank CDs, bills, bonds, andother instruments. Debt serviceInterest payment plus repayments of principal to creditors, that is, retirement of debt.Debt service parity approachAn analysis wherein the alternatives under consideration will provide the firmwith the exact same schedule of after-tax debt payments (including both interest and principal). Debt-service coverage ratioEarnings before interest and income taxes plus one-third rental charges, dividedby interest expense plus one-third rental charges plus the quantity of principal repayments divided by one minus the tax rate. Debt swapA set of transactions (also called a debt-equity swap) in which a firm buys a country's dollar bankdebt at a discount and swaps this debt with the central bank for local currency that it can use to acquire local equity. Debtor in possessionA firm that is continuing to operate under Chapter 11 bankruptcy process.Debtor-in-possession financingNew debt obtained by a firm during the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process.Firm's net value of debtTotal firm value minus total firm debt.Funded debtdebt maturing after more than one year.Interest rate on debtThe firm's cost of debt capital.Junior debt (subordinate debt)debt whose holders have a claim on the firm's assets only after seniordebtholder's claims have been satisfied. Subordinated debt. Long-term debtAn obligation having a maturity of more than one year from the date it was issued. Alsocalled funded debt. Long-term debt/capitalizationIndicator of financial leverage. Shows long-term debt as a proportion of thecapital available. Determined by dividing long-term debt by the sum of long-term debt, preferred stock and common stockholder equity. Long-term debt ratioThe ratio of long-term debt to total capitalization.Long-term debt to equity ratioA capitalization ratio comparing long-term debt to shareholders' equity.Original issue discount debt (OID debt)debt that is initially offered at a price below par.Secured debtdebt that, in the event of default, has first claim on specified assets.Senior debtdebt that, in the event of bankruptcy, must be repaid before subordinated debt receives any payment.Structured debtdebt that has been customized for the buyer, often by incorporating unusual options.Subordinated debtdebt over which senior debt takes priority. In the event of bankruptcy, subordinateddebtholders receive payment only after senior debt claims are paid in full. Total debt to equity ratioA capitalization ratio comparing current liabilities plus long-term debt toshareholders' equity. Trade debtAccounts payable.Unfunded debtdebt maturing within one year (short-term debt). See: funded debt.Unsecured debtdebt that does not identify specific assets that can be taken over by the debtholder in case of default.RATIO OF DEBT TO STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITYA ratio that shows which group—creditors or stockholders—has the biggest stake in or the most control of a company:(Total liabilities) / (Stockholders’ equity) DebtBorrowings from financiers.DebtorsSales to customers who have bought goods or services on credit but who have not yet paid their debt.Bad debtsThe amount of accounts receivable that is not expected to be collected.bad debtsRefers to accounts receivable from credit sales to customersthat a business will not be able to collect (or not collect in full). In hindsight, the business shouldn’t have extended credit to these particular customers. Since these amounts owed to the business will not be collected, they are written off. The accounts receivable asset account is decreased by the estimated amount of uncollectible receivables, and the bad debts expense account is increased this amount. These write-offs can be done by the direct write-off method, which means that no expense is recorded until specific accounts receivable are identified as uncollectible. Or the allowance method can be used, which is based on an estimated percent of bad debts from credit sales during the period. Under this method, a contra asset account is created (called allowance for bad debts) and the balance of this account is deducted from the accounts receivable asset account. debt-to-equity ratioA widely used financial statement ratio to assess theoverall debt load of a business and its capital structure, it equals total liabilities divided by total owners’ equity. Both numbers for this ratio are taken from a business’s latest balance sheet. There is no standard, or generally agreed on, maximum ratio, such as 1:1 or 2:1. Every industry is different in this regard. Some businesses, such as financial institutions, have very high debt-to-equity ratios. In contrast, many businesses use very little debt relative to their owners’ equity. Cost of DebtThe cost of debt (bonds, loans, etc.) that a company is charged forborrowing funds. A component of the cost of capital. Debt RatioThe percentage of debt that is used in the total capitalization of acompany. It is calculated by dividing the total book value of the debt by the book value of all assets. Total Debt to Total Assets RatioSee debt ratioAllowance for bad debtsAn offset to the accounts receivable balance, against whichbad debts are charged. The presence of this allowance allows one to avoid severe changes in the period-to-period bad debt expense by expensing a steady amount to the allowance account in every period, rather than writing off large bad debts to expense on an infrequent basis. Bad debtAn account receivable that cannot be collected.DebtFunds owed to another entity.Long-term debtA debt for which payments will be required for a period of more thanone year into the future. funded debtdebt with more than 1 year remaining to maturity.MM's proposition I (debt irrelevance proposition)The value of a firm is unaffected by its capital structure.secured debtdebt that has first claim on specified collateral in the event of default.subordinated debtdebt that may be repaid in bankruptcy only after senior debt is paid.Debt InstrumentAny financial asset corresponding to a debt, such as a bond or a treasury bill.Monetizing the DebtSee printing money.National DebtThe debt owed by the government as a result of earlier borrowing to finance budget deficits. That part of the debt not held by the central bank is the publically held national debt.Public DebtSee national debt.Publicly Held National DebtSee national debt.Debt SecurityA security representing a debt relationship with an enterprise, including a governmentsecurity, municipal security, corporate bond, convertible debt issue, and commercial paper. Debt CapacityAn assessment of ability and willingness to repay a loan from anticipated future cash flow or other sources.Debt FinancingRaising loan capital through the creation of debt by issuing a form of paper evidencing amounts owed and payable on specified dates or on demand.Debt/Equity RatioA comparison of debt to equity in a company's capital structure.Long Term DebtLiability due in a year or more.Mezzanine DebtRefers to non-conventional debt that has a greater element of risk than secured debt but has less risk than equity.Senior DebtAre debt instruments that provide financing, take primary security against either specific or all assets of the borrower, have fixed terms of repayment and charge fixed or floating interest rates.Subordinated Debtdebt instruments that provide financing for acquisitions, expansion and restructuring, take secondary security against assets, have fixed or flexible terms of repayment and charge fixed or floating interest rates.Debt (Credit Insurance)Money, goods or services that someone is obligated to pay someone else in accordance with an expressed or implied agreement. debt may or may not be secured.Related to : financial, finance, business, accounting, payroll, inventory, investment, money, inventory control, stock trading, financial advisor, tax advisor, credit. |