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    Use "debt instrument" in a sentence

    debt instrument example sentences

    debt instrument


    1. This higher demand for debt instruments in the initial phases of the recovery,


    2. money multiplier effect of deposits and loans, is government debt instruments that should one day be repaid, it becomes apparent that if all of the public paid their debts, along with the federal government, there wouldn’t be any money left


    3. So we have access to their gold and debt instruments in return for our dropping security guarantees for Taiwan and Japan


    4. Distressed investing generally involves buying debt instruments of a troubled company, because in most bankruptcies the equity is wiped out


    5. But the price for this predictability is a lower rate of return, and Klarman is not content to invest in plain vanilla debt instruments simply because they may be secure


    6. The rights to receive cash payments from the company that attach to debt instruments and preferred stocks can constitute a cash drain on a business and thus detract from creditworthiness


    7. The property and casualty insurance industry provides a good example of this: Where an insurer’s capital and surplus are small relative to stated liabilities (and to premium income, which in turn tends to be related to the size of liabilities), that insurer will concentrate its investments in government and investment-grade corporate debt instruments


    8. Assuming good covenant protections, is the bond form not inherently attractive when purchases occur after a downward market valuation caused by anxiety and a deterioration in profitability? Were investors unwilling to ignore market risk, they would miss opportunities to acquire debt instruments that seem utterly devoid of investment risk (e


    9. The securities avoided are both equities and debt instruments


    10. Unless and until the bulk of Source Capital’s investments are in qualified dividend-paying equities rather than interest-paying debt instruments, only a portion of Source Capital Preferred’s dividend payments to its corporate stockholders would be tax-sheltered

    11. Holders of debt instruments have a contractual right to receive periodic interest income and eventual return of principal; therefore, cash bailouts tend to be far more assured for them than for holders of common stocks


    12. Indeed, most long-term debt instruments, such as many of the tax-free obligations of municipalities, private placements held by life insurance companies, and most mortgage loans held by various types of institutional investors, are probably not marketable at all


    13. To these holders, market bailouts are not important, and they view their holdings in much the same way as do holders of debt instruments, with the essential difference that such common stockholders perceive themselves as holding a “bond” on which “interest” payments are to be increased periodically


    14. No matter how favorable the quantitative data, such as coverage and debt ratios, FF practitioners examining most corporate credits assume that the quantitative facts are likely to deteriorate over the long-term life (say a 5-to-15-year life) of a debt instrument


    15. In the case of a debt instrument, cheap means an estimated yield-to-maturity, or yield-to-workout, that is at least 500 basis points greater than could be obtained from a credit instrument bearing about the same level of ultimate credit risk


    16. Here, GAAP are not used to value, per se, but rather to give analysts enough information to gauge the probabilities that a debt instrument will be serviced in accordance with its terms


    17. These rights to money payments for most publicly traded debt instruments exist because of the provisions of Section 316 of the Trust Indenture Act of 1939 (TIA), the provisions of the typical indenture issued for publicly traded bonds, and the provisions of typical loan agreements protecting institutional lenders such as commercial banks


    18. A corporate issuer is required to comply with the TIA if $10,000,000 or more principal amount of debt instruments is to be marketed publicly by the issuer over a 36-month time span (Section 304(a)(9))


    19. This can often be made to be the case if exchanged debt instruments are granted seniority over nonexchanging debt instruments


    20. These voluntary methods usually involve offers to current holders to trade their existing securities or debt instruments for new instruments, usually with a lower principal amount (typically set at a small premium over the current market) and with less onerous cash service requirements

    21. It is frequently difficult to induce voluntary exchanges when the debt instruments are publicly traded and the market prices of these credit instruments are substantially discounted from their principal amount


    22. Issuers invariably attempt to coerce creditors in a voluntary exchange by seeking nonmonetary consents or amendments to the indentures or agreements under which the outstanding debt instruments were issued


    23. While the acquisition of DTG may make Hertz’s future much brighter than would be the case where the analyst relied heavily on Hertz’s operating record from 2006 to 2012, this ought not to be much of a consideration for unsecured creditors acquiring debt instruments priced at or near the principal amount, which in this case is equal to the call price


    24. The major risk of an ETN is that it is an unsecured debt instrument of the issuer, very similar to a bond


    25. In 2008 and in other liquidity crises, equity markets and other exchange-traded assets exhibited more robust liquidity than various debt instruments traded over the counter


    26. High-yield (“junk”) bond: A debt instrument with a Standard & Poor’s rating of BB or less


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