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Q: please define the "syndicated loan"

Category: glossary , Asked by: R. L. From United Kingdom

A: a "syndicated loan " is A loan offered by a group of lenders (called a syndicate) who work together to provide funds for a single borrower. The borrower could be a corporation, a large project, or a sovereignty (such as a government). The loan may involve fixed amounts, a credit line, or a combination of the two. Interest rates can be fixed for the term of the loan or floating based on a benchmark rate such as the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR). Typically there is a lead bank or underwriter of the loan, known as the "arranger", "agent", or "lead lender". This lender may be putting up a proportionally bigger share of the loan, or perform duties like dispersing cash flows amongst the other syndicate members and administrative tasks. Also known as a "syndicated bank facility". The main goal of syndicated lending is to spread the risk of a borrower default across multiple lenders (such as banks) or institutional investors like pensions funds and hedge funds. Because syndicated loans tend to be much larger than standard bank loans, the risk of even one borrower defaulting could cripple a single lender. Syndicated loans are also used in the leveraged buyout community to fund large corporate takeovers with primarily debt funding. Syndicated loans can be made on a "best efforts" basis, which means that if enough investors can't be found, the amount the borrower receives will be lower than originally anticipated. These loans can also be split into dual tranches for banks (who fund standard revolvers or lines of credit) and institutional investors (who fund fixed-rate term loans). Visit ForexWebTrader

  1. Q: please tell me what a "trademark" is

    Category: glossary , Asked by: V. Q. From Tucson, United States

    A: A symbol, word, phrase, logo, or combination of these that legally distinguishes one company's product from any others. Any infringement on a trademark is illegal and therefore grounds for the company owning the trademark to sue the infringing party. A good example of a popular trademark is Nike's swoosh. If another company tried to confuse consumers by using a symbol that looked like the swoosh, that company would be infringing on the Nike's trademark rights. Nike would therefore has grounds to sue. Another trademarked logo that is globally recognized is Coca-Cola's wave.

  2. Q: Which forex site has advanced first time users schools, in your opinion?

    Category: platform , Asked by: Y. Vang from United States

    A: Definitely "UFX bank". They give great guides for beginners, with simple to understand instructions and dialog boxes. You can truly educate yourself some of them.

  3. Q: do you know what the "take or pay" is?

    Category: glossary , Asked by: D. E. From Switzerland

    A: "take or pay " is A provision, written into a contract, whereby one party has the obligation of either taking delivery of goods or paying a specified amount. This is used in some contracts as a method to ensure that the transaction occurs. For example, a Banana farmer will enter into a take or pay contract with a fruit retailer so that the retailer will buy all the bananas from the farmer or pay a provision for not buying them.

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