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  2. Cash and cash equivalents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cash_and_cash_equivalents

    An investment normally counts as a cash equivalent when it has a short maturity period of 90 days or less, and can be included in the cash and cash equivalents balance from the date of acquisition when it carries an insignificant risk of changes in the asset value. If it has a maturity of more than 90 days, it is not considered a cash equivalent.

  3. Short-term bonds vs. long-term bonds: Which are better for you?

    www.aol.com/finance/short-term-bonds-vs-long...

    At maturity, the issuer must repay the principal investment (face value) and any accrued interest. Ultra-short-term bonds (or cash equivalents) have a maturity of less than a year, such as 90-day ...

  4. Savings bonds: What they are and how to cash them in - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/savings-bonds-cash-them...

    Series EE bonds issued from November through April 2025 earn a rate of 2.60 percent, while Series I bonds issued during the same period pay a higher 3.11 percent yield, which will fluctuate ...

  5. Corporate bonds: Here are the big risks and rewards - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/corporate-bonds-big-risks...

    A bond is one way to finance an organization, and it’s an agreement where a borrower (the bond issuer) agrees to pay a certain amount of interest to a lender over a specific time period in ...

  6. Doctrine of cash equivalence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctrine_of_Cash_Equivalence

    But that principle also has a true inverse—that a non-negotiable instrument can be a cash equivalent if the following factors are met. [11] A promise to pay will be considered a cash equivalent for cash method taxpayers if: the promise to pay is unconditional; the promise is made by a solvent person; the promise is assignable;

  7. Fixed income - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_income

    The coupon (of a bond) is the annual interest that the issuer must pay, expressed as a percentage of the principal. The maturity is the end of the bond, the date that the issuer must return the principal. The issue is another term for the bond itself. The indenture, in some cases, is the contract that states all of the terms of the bond.

  8. How often do Treasury bonds pay interest? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/often-treasury-bonds-pay...

    What Treasury bonds pay in interest. Let’s run through an example of how Treasury bonds work and what they could pay you. Imagine a 30-year U.S. Treasury Bond is paying around a 3 percent coupon ...

  9. Money market fund - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_market_fund

    Money market funds in the United States created a solution to the limitations of Regulation Q, [7] which at the time prohibited demand deposit accounts from paying interest and capped the rate of interest on other types of bank accounts at 5.25%. Thus, money market funds were created as a substitute for bank accounts.