The interest due on a bond since the last interest payment was made The buyer of the bond pays the market price plus accrued interest
the dollar amount of interest accrued on a municipal obligation, based on the stated interest rate In the Environmental Improvement Fund, interest accrues on loan monies from the date of disbursement This is usually the dollar amount of unpaid interest that has accrued to a certain date, such as a call date or interest payment date
Interest earned between the most recent interest payment and the present date, but not yet paid to the lender
If you postpone repaying the interest on your loan, it will accumulate - accrue - alongside the balance The accrued interest will be CAPITALIZED (added to your loan balance), so you pay interest on the interest Under federal regulation, for loans disbursed on or after 10/1/98, a lender may only capitalize accrued interest at the end of the grace period, at the end of deferment or forbearance, or when the borrower defaults
The interest that has accumulated over the time elapsed since you the borrower made your last interest payment (See Interest)
Accumulated interest on a bond since the last coupon payment The buyer of a bond pays the accrued interest to the seller in addition to the purchase price The buyer is reimbursed on the next coupon payment date when the interest is paid in full
The interest that has accumulated since the last interest payment up to, but not including, the settlement date and that is added to the contract price of a bond transaction There are two methods for calculating accrued interest: the 30-day-month 360-da
The amount of interest that is accumulated in an interest-based investment option as of a special date
The amount credited to a bond or other fixed-income security between the last payment and when the security is sold, or any intermediate date The buyer usually pays the seller the security's price plus the accrued interest
Interest earned but not yet paid For most taxpayers, tax is due in year accrued interest is paid When buying a bond, buyer pays seller any interest accrued since the last payment date When the buyer eventually sells the bond, the new buyer pays any accrued interest The accrued interest is subject to taxes for the seller, but reduces the tax liability for the buyer For example, if a bond buyer paid $30 accrued interest to a seller, then received $150 interest for the rest of the year, the buyer needs to pay taxes on $150 - $30 = $120
Interest due from issue date or from the last coupon date to the security settlement date Interest that has accumulated on a bond since its most recent regular interest payment date The buyer of the security pays the accrued interest to the seller and recoups a full payment on the next payment date
Interest on a loan that accumulates and is to be paid in installments at a later time (usually when the principal becomes due) rather than being paid from the time the loan is made Accrued interest may be compounded or simple
Interest accrued on a bond or other fixed income security since the last interest payment was made At the time of a sale, the buyer of a bond pays the market price plus accrued interest to the seller Exceptions are bonds that are in default (termed to be 'trading flat') Accrued interest is calculated by multiplying the coupon rate by the number of days that have elapsed since the last payment
Interest earned between the most recent interest payment and the present date but not yet paid to the lender
The interest accumulated on a bond or debenture since the last interest payment date
Applies mainly to convertible securities Interest that has accumulated between the most recent payment and the sale of a bond or other fixed-income security At the time of sale, the buyer pays the seller the bond's price plus "accrued interest," calculated by multiplying the coupon rate by the fraction of the coupon period that has elapsed since the last payment (If a bondholder receives $40 in coupon payments per bond semiannually and sells the bond one-quarter of the way into the coupon period, the buyer pays the seller $10 as the latter's proportion of interest earned )
The accumulated coupon interest earned but not yet paid to the seller of a bond by the buyer (unless the bond is in default)
Coupon interest accumulated on a bond or note since the last interest payment or, for a new issue, from the dated date to the date of delivery Since interest on municipal bonds is payable semi-annually, every six months, when you buy a bond in mid-term you are only entitled to the interest the bond earns after you buy it The interest earned previously, the accrued interest, belongs to the seller Some first-time bond buyers think this payment is a hidden charge or fee, not realizing that they will get it back in full at the next interest payment date as tax-free interest
Interest that has been earned but not yet paid or credited; for example, interest earned on a bond since the last interest payment was made
The amount of interest accumulated between the most recent payment and the sale of a fixed-interest security For most bonds, accrued interest must be added to the purchase price, but that amount will be recovered by the purchaser in the next interest payment