A specified portion of the original bond proceeds which will be used to pay interest on the bonds until revenue from planned sources becomes available upon completion of construction.
A portion of the proceeds of an issue that is set aside to pay interest on the securities for a specified period of time. Interest is commonly capitalized for the construction period of a revenue-producing project, and sometimes for a period thereafter, so that debt service expense does not begin until the project is expected to be operational and producing revenues. Capitalized interest is sometimes referred to as “funded interest.
Accrued interest that is added to the principal balance of a loan while payments are not being made or are insufficient to cover both the principal and interest due.
Interest added to the principal amount. When this is done, the principal amount and monthly payments are increased during the repayment period, since you are paying interest on interest.
A portion of the proceeds of an Issue which will be used to pay interest on the Bonds for a specific period of time (usually the period of construction of the Project financed by the Issue).
Capitalized interest is the interest that the lender adds to the loan amount if it is not paid. A student can often choose whether to make interest payments during the time they are in school, or postpone interest payments. If they postpone payments, interest is capitalized. This technique increases the loan amount.
unpaid interest that is added to the unpaid principal balance on a loan.
Accrued interest which is added to the principal creating a new and higher balance.
Accrued interest that is added to the balance of a loan, thereby increasing the balance due.
Accrued interest that is added to your 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.
is using loan proceeds to make interest payments on the loan during a specified period such as during project construction. Capitalizing interest increases the loan balance and thereby increases future loan payments necessary to repay the loan. The EIF only allows interest to be capitalized on a loan when the municipality will not have a user charge revenue stream to make loan payments until after a sewer or water system is fully constructed.
Accrued interest added to the borrower’s outstanding principal.
Unpaid accrued interest that is added to the principal balance of the loan (usually after deferment or forbearance).
Unpaid interest added to the principal balance of a loan that increases the total outstanding balance due.
INTEREST cost incurred during the time necessary to bring an ASSET to the condition and location for its intended use and included as part of the HISTORICAL COST of acquiring the asset.
The accrued interest that is added to the principal balance of a loan while you are not making payments or your payments are insufficient to cover both the principal and interest due. When this happens, you end up paying interest on interest, sometimes called "negative amortization."