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Interest-Bearing Securities
Source:
Encyclopedia of Banking & Finance (9h Edition) by Charles J Woelfel
(We recommend this as work of authority and you can order
it here)
Bonds, notes,
mortgages, debentures, certificates of indebtedness, equipment trust certificates,
and other evidences of debt, that yield interest, as contrasted with equity
securities, such as preferred stocks, common stocks, and other evidences
of ownership, that yield dividends and other distributions.
Interest and dividends differ in their strength of claim, interest
being a fixed charge which if not paid entitles the creditors to legal
recourse in event of default; whereas dividends are not fixed charges,
being dependent upon availability of funds therefor as well as decision
by the management of the entity whether or not to pay dividends.
Omission of dividends, therefore, does not give equity owners the
power to enforce any claim for dividends; even in the case of cumulative
preferred stocks, omission of dividends does not give holders of such
preferred stocks legal recourse for payment but merely the entitlement
to such omitted dividends (on which no interest is paid) plus regular
dividends before the common stock shall receive dividends; and in the
event of liquidation, entitlement of such omitted dividends plus the asset
preferences for the preferred stocks, before the common stock receives
any distributions.
See BOND
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