Powered by Lexis+®
CASE STUDY

“Because of the pure breadth and depth of black letter law research and practical guidance that LexisNexis provides, we don't have to rely on counsel as much as perhaps firms that don't use LexisNexis.”

KaurMaxwell

Access all documents on Floating rate bond or note

Floating rate bond or note meaning

What does Floating rate bond or note mean?
A floating rate bond or note (FRN) is a debt security whose coupon is reset on specified interest reset dates by reference to a benchmark interest rate plus a fixed margin. It is a market description rather than a statutory term, used across capital markets and banking practice in England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland. Key features include: - Reference rate: typically SONIA for sterling issuances and EURIBOR or, increasingly, €STR for euro issuances. LIBOR has been discontinued for sterling and most currencies; any legacy references rely on contractual fallbacks or synthetic settings where applicable. - Reset mechanics: the prospectus, trust deed or agency agreement sets the formula (benchmark + margin/spread), reset frequency (for example, quarterly), day‑count and business day conventions, and whether compounding applies. - Determination: a calculation agent sources the screen rate and applies any floors, caps or benchmark adjustments. - Benchmark compliance: UK law issuances engage the UK Benchmarks Regulation; Irish/euro issuances engage the EU Benchmarks Regulation, both requiring robust fallbacks for benchmark cessation or unavailability. FRNs are commonly issued by corporates, financial institutions and sovereigns to align borrowing costs with prevailing rates and to manage interest rate risk. Usage and legal analysis are broadly consistent across the UK and Ireland.
Speed up all aspects of your legal work with tools that help you to work faster and smarter. Win cases, close deals and grow your business–all whilst saving time and reducing risk.

View the related Practice Notes about Floating rate bond or note

PRACTICE NOTES
Comprehensive glossary of UK restructuring and insolvency terms, covering Companies Act schemes, Part 26A plans, IA 1986 processes, and cross‑border concepts including COMI, UNCITRAL and assimilated EU rules.

This glossary sets out numerous expressions regularly encountered in the restructuring & insolvency sphere. Words shown in bold within definitions are themselves explained in other entries in this glossary as well. A Article X The MLIJ contains a single provision named Article X, aimed at jurisdictions that have already implemented the MLCBI, like England, or are weighing its adoption. Article X states: ‘Not withstanding any prior interpretation to the contrary, the relief available under [insert a cross-reference to the legislation of this State enacting Article 21 of the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency] includes recognition and enforcement of a judgment’ (see Practice Note: UNCITRAL model law on recognition and enforcement of insolvency-related judgments (MLIJ): Article X). Asset-backed security (ABS) A form of security anchored by asset pools, for example loans, leases, and credit card receivables. Assimilated law From 1 January 2024, ‘retained law’ has been retitled ‘assimilated law’. The body of domestic law originally arising from EU obligations, created by the European...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
UK Banking, Finance, Capital Markets, Derivatives and Insolvency Law Glossary including Islamic finance

Banking & Finance glossary A Auditing and Accounting Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) The foremost Islamic, international, autonomous, independent, not-for-profit corporate body that develops and issues accounting, auditing, governance, ethics and Shari’ah benchmarks and standards for Islamic Financial Institutions (IFIs) and the wider Islamic finance sector. Founded in Bahrain in 1991, it is backed by a number of institutional members across more than 45 countries, including central banks and regulatory authorities, financial institutions, accounting and auditing practices, and legal firms. Its pronouncements are currently applied by leading Islamic financial institutions across the world and have advanced a progressive and gradual harmonisation of global Islamic finance practice. It also delivers professional qualification programmes—notably Certified Islamic Professional Accountant (CIPA), Certified Shari’ah Adviser and Auditor (CSAA), and the corporate compliance programme—in efforts to strengthen the industry’s human capital and governance frameworks. For further details, see Practice Note: Key participants in the Islamic finance industry—Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI). Acceleration Acceleration is the formal action...

Read More Right Arrow