Bullet notes

Da Thinkfn
Revisão das 05h08min de 14 de outubro de 2007 por Incognitus (discussão | contribs)

(dif) ← Revisão anterior | Revisão atual (dif) | Revisão seguinte → (dif)

Em banca e finança, uma "bullet loan" é um empréstimo onde a totalidade do capital da dívida <ref>Howard, Bob. "Insurers brace themselves for oncoming 'bullets.'", 1993 April 26. Consultado em 2007-04-17. </ref> and sometimes the principal and interest,<ref>See, for example, http://www.anz.com/edna/dictionary.asp?action=content&content=bullet_loan Edna Carew, The Language of Money (Financial Dictionary).</ref> is due at the end of the loan term. A bullet loan can be a mortgage, bond, note or any other type of credit.

The payment that is due at the end of the loan is referred to as the bullet payment or balloon payment.

Bullet loans are common, and usually referred to by other names; bullet loan is a generic and unofficial term. Many types of publicly-traded bonds and notes constitute bullet loans: the face value of the bond is payable at bond maturity, and only interest payments are due during the interim periods. Short-term bonds or notes which pay no interest are also a form of bullet loan.

Bullet loans should be contrasted with amortizing loans, where the amount of principal is paid down over the life of the loan. There is no requirement that a loan be a bullet loan or an amortizing loan; combinations of all sorts exist. For example, a loan may have a grace period during which no principal is paid; partial amortization during the remainder of the loan; and a bullet payment at the end of the loan that is some percentage of the original principal.


Referências

<references />