Collateral
41collateral — col|lat|er|al1 [ kə læt(ə)rəl ] noun uncount LEGAL property that you agree to give to a bank if you fail to pay back money you have borrowed collateral col|lat|er|al 2 [ kə læt(ə)rəl ] adjective FORMAL relating to something but less important… …
42collateral — [kɒ lat(ə)r(ə)l] noun 1》 something pledged as security for repayment of a loan. 2》 a person descended from the same ancestor as another but through a different line. adjective 1》 descended from the same stock but by a different line. 2》… …
43collateral — A form of security, especially an impersonal form of security, such as life assurance policies or shares, used to secure a bank loan. In some senses such impersonal securities are referred to as a secondary collateral, rather than a primary… …
44collateral — noun she put up her house as collateral for the loan Syn: security, surety, guarantee, guaranty, insurance, indemnity, indemnification; backing …
45collateral — /kə læt(ə)rəl/ adjective, noun referring to security used to provide a guarantee for a loan ▪▪▪ ‘…examiners have come to inspect the collateral that thrifts may use in borrowing from the Fed’ [Wall Street Journal] …
46collateral — /kə læt(ə)rəl/ adjective used to provide a guarantee for a loan ■ noun security, such as negotiable instruments, shares or goods, used to provide a guarantee for a loan ▪▪▪ ‘…examiners have come to inspect the collateral that thrifts may use in… …
47collateral — Noun: Stocks or bonds accompanying an obligation as security therefor; a collateral relative. Adjective: Accompanying in the sense of going side by side, as security accompanying the principal obligation …
48Collateral management — Collateral has been used for hundreds of years to provide security against the possibility of payment default by the opposing party in a trade. Collateral management began in the 1980s, with Bankers Trust and Salomon Brothers taking collateral… …
49Collateral estoppel — (CE), known in modern terminology as issue preclusion, is a common law estoppel doctrine that prevents a person from relitigating an issue. One summary is that once a court has decided an issue of fact or law necessary to its judgment, that… …
50Collateral consequences of criminal charges — Collateral consequences of criminal charges, known as the Four C s in legal parlance [http://www2.law.columbia.edu/fourcs] , are the results of arrest, prosecution or conviction that are not part of the sentence imposed. This includes any… …