enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Secured transaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secured_transaction

    The debtor is in debt $10K to the secured creditor and $2000 to the unsecured creditors. Assume the debtor defaults and his only asset is the automobile. The dealership can repossess the auto and sell it to satisfy its debt. Two things can happen here: 1) The dealership sells the collateral (car) for more than the amount of the debt (let's say ...

  3. Debtor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debtor

    The counterparty is called a creditor. When the counterpart of this debt arrangement is a bank, the debtor is more often referred to as a borrower. If X borrowed money from their bank, X is the debtor and the bank is the creditor. If X puts money in the bank, X is the creditor and the bank is the debtor. It is not a crime to fail to pay a debt.

  4. Security interest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_interest

    In finance, a security interest is a legal right granted by a debtor to a creditor over the debtor's property (usually referred to as the collateral [1]) which enables the creditor to have recourse to the property if the debtor defaults in making payment or otherwise performing the secured obligations. [2]

  5. Secured vs. unsecured debt: What’s the difference? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/secured-vs-unsecured-debt...

    Most secured debt, including the examples above, is considered consensual. This means you voluntarily agree to list your property as collateral for the loan. But secured debt can also be non ...

  6. Unsecured creditor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsecured_creditor

    An unsecured creditor is a creditor other than a preferential creditor that does not have the benefit of any security interests in the assets of the debtor. [1]In the event of the bankruptcy of the debtor, the unsecured creditors usually obtain a pari passu distribution out of the assets of the insolvent company on a liquidation in accordance with the size of their debt after the secured ...

  7. UCC-1 financing statement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UCC-1_financing_statement

    A UCC-1 financing statement (an abbreviation for Uniform Commercial Code-1) is a United States legal form that a creditor files to give notice that it has or may have an interest in the personal property of a debtor (a person who owes a debt to the creditor as typically specified in the agreement creating the debt).

  8. The IMF in figures: Debtors vs creditors - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/imf-figures-debtors-vs...

    The International Monetary Fund's current debtor-creditor balance gives the United States an outsized weight in the voting, which translates into Washington holding roughly 25 times the voting ...

  9. True Value hardware store files bankruptcy, to be sold to Do ...

    www.aol.com/true-value-hardware-store-files...

    Do it Best has lead 'stalking horse' bid for True Value. Do It Best has offered to pay $153 million in cash to purchase the business, Reuters reported.The sale is expected to be complete by the ...