Chapter 14
off balance sheet financing
acquisition of assets by agreeing to liabilities not reported on the balance sheet
effective interest method
allocates interest expense over the bond life to yield a constant rate of interest; interest expense for a period is found by multiplying the balance of the liability at the beginning of the period by the bond market rate at issuance; also called interest method
par value of a bond
amount the bond issuer agrees to pay at maturity and the amount on which cash interest payments are based; also called face amount or face value of a bond
unsecured bonds
bonds backed only by the issuer's credit standing; almost always riskier than secured bonds; also called debentures
serial bonds
bonds consisting of separate amounts that mature at different dates
bearer bonds
bonds made payable to whoever holds them; also called unregistered bonds
registered bonds
bonds owned by investors whose names and addresses are recorded by the issuer; interest payments are made to the registered owners
term bonds
bonds scheduled for payment (maturity) at a single specified date
convertible bonds
bonds that bondholders can exchange for a set number of the issuer's shares
callable bonds
bonds that give the issuer the option to retire them at a stated amount prior to maturity
secured bond
bonds that have specific assets of the issuer pledged as collateral
sinking fund bonds
bonds that require the issuer to make deposits to a separate account ; bondholders are repaid at maturity from that account
coupon bonds
bonds with interest coupons attached to their certificates; bondholders detach coupons when they mature and present them to a bank or broker for collection
bond indenture
contract between the bond issuer and the bondholders; identifies the parties rights and obligations
lease
contract specifying the rental of property
pension plan
contractual agreement between an employer and its employees for the employer to provide benefits to employees after they retired; expensed when incurred
debt to equity ratio
defined as total liabilities divided by total equity; shows the proportion of a company financed by non-owners (creditors) in comparison with that financed by owners
premium on bond
difference between a bond's par value and its higher carrying value; occurs when the contract rate is higher than the market rate; also called bond premium
discount on bonds payable
difference between a bond's par value and its lowers issue price or carrying value; occurs when the contract rate is less than the market price
bond certificate
document containing bond specifics such as issuer's name, bond par value, contract interest rate, and maturity date
contract rate
interest rate specified in a bond indenture (or note); multiplied by the par value to determine the interest paid each period; also called coupon rate, stated rate, or nominal rate
market rate
interest rate that borrowers are willing to pay and lenders are willing to accept for a specific lending agreement given the borrower's risk level
mortgage
legal loan agreement that protects a lender by giving the lender the right to be paid from the cash proceeds from the sale of a borrower's assets identified in the mortgage
installment note
liability requiring a series of periodic payments to the lender
capital leases
long term leases in which the lessor transfers substantially all risk and rewards of ownership to the lessee
straight line bond amortization
method allocating an equal amount of bond interest expense to each period of the bond life
carrying value of bonds
net amount at which bonds are reported on the balance sheet; equals the par value of the bonds less any unamortized discount or plus any unamortized premium; also called carrying amount or book value
fair value option
reporting option that permits a company to use fair value in reporting certain assets and liabilities, which is presently based on a 3-level system to determined fair value
annuity
series of equal payments at equal intervals
operating leases
short-term (or cancelable) leases in which the lessor retains risks and rewards of ownership
bond
written promise to pay the bond's par (or face) value and interest at a stated contract rate; often issued in denominations of $1,000