anticipated+payment
1anticipated income doctrine of liquidity — An explanation of bank liquidity developed by Herbert Prochnow, in which the net cash flow of bank borrowers, rather than subsequent new borrowings, is seen as the true source of loan repayments. Accordingly, to the extent that loans are written… …
2international payment and exchange — ▪ economics Introduction international exchange also called foreign exchange respectively, any payment made by one country to another and the market in which national currencies are bought and sold by those who require them for such… …
3Escrow payment — is the common term referring to the portion of a mortgage payment that is designated to pay for real property taxes and hazard insurance. It is an amount over and above the principal and interest portion of a mortgage payment. Since the escrow… …
4Balloon Payment — An oversized payment due at the end of a mortgage, commercial loan or other amortized loan. Because the entire loan amount is not amortized over the life of the loan, the remaining balance is due as a final repayment to the lender. Balloon… …
5balloon payment — /bəˈlun peɪmənt/ (say buh loohn paymuhnt) noun a loan repayment, usually the final one, which is much larger than the other repayments, as part of a loan repayment scheme in which the borrower has low repayments in the early stages of the loan… …
6Argentine debt restructuring — Argentina went through an economic crisis beginning in the mid 1990s, with full recession between 1999 and 2002; though it is debatable whether this crisis has ended, the situation has been more stable, and improving, since 2003. (See Economy of… …
7Acronyms in healthcare — v · d · …
8Argentine economic crisis (1999–2002) — The Argentine economic crisis was part of the situation that affected Argentina s economy during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Macroeconomically speaking, the critical period started with the decrease of real GDP in 1999 and ended in 2002 with… …
9advance — I. v. a. 1. Push, send, or set forward or onward, propel, bring forward, move toward the front. 2. Promote, aggrandize, exalt, elevate, dignify, raise to preferment, raise to higher rank. 3. Forward, further, promote, improve, strengthen, benefit …
10scale — Payment of different rates of interest on CDs of varying maturities ( maturity). A bank is said to post a scale. Commercial paper dealers also post scales. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * scale scale [skeɪl] noun 1. [singular, uncountable]… …