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Debt
( Read about causes, description and important information.
)
It is that which is owed. A person or company owing
debt is called a debtor. An entity to whom debt is
owed is called a creditor. Debt is used to borrow
purchasing power from the future. Companies use debt
as a part of their overall corporate finance strategy.
• Credit Report
Payment
People or organisations often enter into agreements
to borrow something. Both parties must agree on some
standard of deferred payment, most usually a sum of
money denominated as units of a currency, but sometimes
a like good. For instance, one may borrow shares,
in which case, one may pay for them later with the
shares, plus a premium for the borrowing privilege,
or the sum of money required to buy them in the market
at that time.
Types of debt
There are numerous types of debt obligations. They
include loans, bonds, mortgages and promissory notes.
It is common to borrow large sums for major purchases,
such as a mortgage, and pay it back with an agreed
premium interest rate over time, or all at once at
a later date (balloon payment). The amount of money
outstanding is usually called a debt. The debt will
increase through time if it is not repaid faster than
it grows. In some systems of economics this effect
is termed usury, in others, the term "usury"
refers only to an excessive rate of interest, in excess
of a reasonable profit for the risk accepted.
Large organizations can issue debt in the form of
securities, known as bonds. Each bond entitles the
holder to interest and principal repayments. Bonds
are traded in the bond markets, and are widely used
as relatively safe investments.
Debt, inflation and the exchange rate
As noted above, debt is normally denominated in a
particular monetary currency, and so changes in the
valuation of that currency can change the effective
size of the debt. This can happen due to inflation
or deflation, so it can happen even though the borrower
and the lender are using the same currency. Thus it
is important to agree on standards of deferred payment
in advance, so that a degree of fluctuation will also
be agreed as acceptable. It is for instance common
to agree to "US dollar denominated" debt.
The form of debt involved in banking gives rise to
a large proportion of the money in most industrialised
nations (see money and credit money for a discussion
of this). There is therefore a complex relationship
between inflation, deflation, the money supply, and
debt. The store of value represented by the entire
economy of the industrialized nation itself, and the
state's ability to levy tax on it, acts to the foreign
holder of debt as a guarantee of repayment, since
industrial goods are in high demand in many places
worldwide.
Risk free interest rate
Lendings to stable financial entities such as large
companies or governments are often termed "risk
free" or "low risk" and made at a so-called
"risk-free interest rate". This is because
the debt and interest are highly unlikely to be defaulted.
A textbook example of such risk-free interest is a
US Treasury security - it yields you the minimum return
available in economics, but you get the security of
the knowledge that the US has never defaulted on its
debt instruments. A risk-free rate is commonly used
in setting floating interest rates, floating interest
rate is usually calculated as risk-free interest rate
plus a bonus to the creditor based on the creditworthiness
of the debtor.
However if the real value of a currency has changed
in the meantime, the purchasing power of the money
repaid may vary considerably from that which was expected
at the commencement of the loan. So from a practical
investment point of view, there is still considerable
risk attached to "risk free" or "low
risk" lendings. The real value of the money may
have changed due to inflation, or, in the case of
a foreign investment, due to exchange rate fluctuations.
The Bank for International Settlements is an organisation
that sets rules to define how much capital banks have
to hold against the loans they give out. It has had
a pivotal position in central banking since 1947 when
it was founded as part of the Bretton Woods agreements.
Bad Debt is a loan that can not (partially or fully)
be repaid by the debtor. The debtor is said to default
on his debt. These types of debt are frequently repackaged
and sold below face value.
Short of bankruptcy, very often debts are wholly
or partially forgiven. Traditions in some cultures
demand that this be done on a regular (often annual)
basis, in order to prevent systemic inequities between
groups in society, or anyone becoming a specialist
in holding debt and coercing repayment.
Effects of debt
Debt allows people and organisations to do things
that they otherwise wouldn't be able or allowed to.
Commonly, people in industrialised nations use it
to purchase houses, cars and many other things too
expensive to buy with cash on hand. Companies also
use debt in many ways to leverage the investment made
in their private equity. This leverage, the proportion
of debt to equity, is considered important in determining
the riskiness of an investment; the higher more debt
per equity, the riskier. Debt as a whole is a sign
of optimism, a society believes in its future, earnings
especially, and of lack of work ethic, a society postpones
the solution to present problems, when it compensates
a fall in revenues, perceived as short term, by an
increase in debt for instance.
Excesses in debt accumulation have been blamed for
exacerbating economic problems. For example, prior
to the beginning of the Great Depression debt/GDP
ratio was very high. Economic agents were heavily
indebted. This excess in debt, equivalent to excessive
expectations on future returns, accompanied asset
bubbles (stock market). When expectations corrected,
deflation and credit crunch followed. deflation effectively
made debt more expansive and as Fisher explained this
reinforced deflation agin. In order to reduce their
debt level, economic agents reduced their consumption
and investetment. The reduction in demand reduced
business activity and caused further unemployment.
Also in a direct sense, more bankruptcies occurred
due to increased debt cost caused by deflation, and
the reduced demand.
It is possible for some organisations to enter into
alternative types of borrowing and repayment arrangements
which will not result in bankruptcy. For example,
companies can sometimes convert debt that they owe
into equity in themselves. In this case, the lender
hopes to regain something equivalent to the debt and
interest in the form of dividends and capital gains
of the borrower. The "repayments" are therefore
proportional to what the borrower earns and so can
not in themselves cause bankruptcy. Once debt is converted
in this way, it is no longer known as debt.
Debt
Calculators
See also
Annuity
* Bond (finance)
* Credit
* Credit repair
* Debt consolidation
* Default (finance)
* Derivative (finance)
* Domestic debt
* Financial markets
* Global debt
* Government debt (public debt)
* Interest
* List of finance topics
* Personal debt (household debt)
* Personal finance
Structured
Settlement
* Time value of money
• Creditworthiness
• What is a Loan
• Annual Percentage Rate
• Origination Fee
• Point in a Mortgage
• Bankruptcy
This article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from
the Wikipedia
article "Debt".
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