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Term (of a bond) meaning

What does Term (of a bond) mean?
The term of a bond describes the length of time to its scheduled maturity date; in practice it is often used to mean the remaining period until final redemption of principal (the bond’s tenor or term to maturity). It is a descriptive market and drafting expression, not generally defined by legislation or case law, and its usage is broadly consistent across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland for debt securities (including corporate bonds, gilts and notes). The term is set by the maturity date in the trust deed or conditions. For amortising bonds, the term runs to the final scheduled payment, despite earlier principal instalments. Perpetual bonds have no fixed term. Optional redemption features (call or put), make-whole provisions, regulatory calls or acceleration on default can shorten the remaining term, though they do not alter the original scheduled maturity; in structured or securitisation bonds, expected maturity may differ from legal maturity. In surety and construction contexts (for example, performance bonds or bid bonds), the term refers to the duration of the surety’s obligation until the stated expiry or release. Term length is significant for pricing, interest rate risk, disclosure, regulatory classification and covenant drafting, and for categorising securities as short-,...
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View the related News about Term (of a bond)

NEWS
Banking and finance weekly: ECCTA measures, Takeover Code changes, Supreme Court shipping ruling, FCA transparency and consolidated tape, ring-fencing reforms, green loans and ESG disclosures, sanctions (14 November 2024)

In this issue: Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round-up Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 Lending Acquisition finance Shipping finance Real estate finance Sustainable finance Debt capital markets Derivatives Regulation for banking lawyers Sanctions Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Useful information Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round-up For a summary of this week’s Sustainable finance and ESG developments, see Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round-up—14 November 2024. Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 (Commencement No 3) Regulations 2024 (SI 2024/1108): Provisions in ECCTA 2023 on civil recovery of cryptoassets in Scotland took effect on 7 November 2024, and measures introducing the UK-wide offence of failure to prevent fraud will commence on 1 September 2025. See: LNB News 07/11/2024 12. Unique Identifiers (Application of Company Law) Regulations 2024 (SI 2024/Draft): These draft Regulations would widen...

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NEWS
High Court (England and Wales): SPA warranty notices valid without naming seller-awareness individuals or detailing material adverse impact (TP ICAP v NEX)

TP ICAP Ltd v NEX Group Ltd [2022] EWHC 2700 (Comm) The claims for breach of warranty stemmed from two probes: one by the US Commodities Futures Trading Commission concerning swaps trading linked to bond issuances and another by a Frankfurt public prosecutor targeting a named director of a group entity in relation to cum-ex trading during the relevant period. In essence, the alleged breaches concerned warranties addressing the following: that no group company, officer, or employee had been the subject of any non-routine investigation of any kind by a ‘Governmental Authority’ within the prior 18 months; and that no circumstances existed which could reasonably be expected to result in litigation against a group company where the amount in dispute exceeds £500,000. Those warranties were, in places, qualified by a seller-awareness threshold (here defined as the actual knowledge, after reasonable enquiries, of eight specified individuals) and were restated at completion of the SPA. The first of those warranties was repeated on completion...

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NEWS
UK banking and finance weekly: case law on on-demand lending and bonds; aviation novation rectification; sustainable finance; ICMA; BoE SVB transfer; FCA transparency; AI in markets; OFSI sanctions FAQs

In this issue: Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round-up Lending On-demand bonds Aviation finance Sustainable finance Debt capital markets Regulation for banking lawyers Technology in banking and finance transactions Sanctions Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Useful information Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round-up For this week’s highlights on Sustainable finance and ESG, consult Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round-up—7 November 2024. Lending Murfet and another v Property Lending LLP and another company [2024] EWHC 2787 (Ch) Clause 7.2 of the Facility Letter provided that sums advanced were “repayable on demand”, empowering the lenders to require repayment of the entire borrowing at any moment without having to justify the demand. The contra proferentem rule was irrelevant because there was no uncertainty in Clause 7.2 warranting construction against the lenders as the drafting party. The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 did not bite, since Clause 7.2 formed...

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View the related Practice Notes about Term (of a bond)

PRACTICE NOTES
Fiscal agents in bond issues: payment and administrative functions, fiscal agency agreements, bondholder remedies, limited modification powers, and interaction with trustees and other agents

In most bond or note offerings, the issuer will appoint an agent—or more frequently a panel of agents—to perform a range of administrative tasks on its behalf in connection with the issue. One agent will co-ordinate the activities of the others. Where the transaction does not include a trustee, that co-ordinating role falls to the fiscal agent. If a trustee is involved, the principal paying agent performs the co-ordinating function instead. The primary benefit of a fiscal agency structure for a straightforward bond issue is the potential for lower costs overall. By comparison, putting in place the alternative arrangement with a trustee and principal paying agency is typically more expensive to establish in practice. For ease of reference in this Practice Note, the term ‘bonds’ is used in a generic sense to cover all forms of debt securities (including bonds, notes and commercial paper). For guidance on the difference between ‘bonds’ and ‘notes’ and the meaning of ‘commercial paper’, see Practice Note: Types of debt securities. Who is the...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Bond trustees under English law trust deeds: roles, powers, monitoring, defaults, amendments, duties, liability, no action clauses, enforcement and replacement

What does this Practice Note cover? This Practice Note describes the duties and functions of a bond trustee appointed under an English law trust deed for a bond issue. A trustee is not a feature of every bond offering. Some issues proceed without one. The issuer chooses whether to use a trustee or a fiscal agent—see Practice Note: Parties in an issue of debt securities—Fiscal agent or trustee. Bringing in a trustee has significant implications for the issuer and for bondholders (see: Reasons for appointing a trustee below). In this Practice Note, ‘bonds’ is used as a catch-all term for debt securities of all kinds (such as bonds, notes and commercial paper). Be aware, however, that alternative considerations can arise in structured finance deals. For an explanation of the difference between ‘bonds’ and ‘notes’ and the definition of ‘commercial paper’, see Practice Note: Types of debt securities. Who is the bond trustee? The trustee is appointed by the issuer and serves as the go-between for the issuer...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK tax reliefs for sukuk al ijara sale and leaseback of land under FA 2009 Schedule 61: SDLT, CGT and capital allowances—structure, conditions and anti-avoidance

Sukuk (singular form: ‘sakk’) Sukuk are Shari’a-compliant financing instruments, commonly described as Islamic certificates or bonds. For further detail, see Practice Notes: The structure and elements of a Sukuk transaction and Sukuk—investment bond arrangements and their UK direct tax treatment—What are sukuk? Where the statutory requirements are satisfied, sukuk can access the UK tax regime that applies to alternative finance investment bond (AFIB) arrangements. For guidance on those provisions, see Practice Note: Sukuk—investment bond arrangements and their UK direct tax treatment. A distinct variant is sukuk al ijara. In such structures, the bond-issuer (the legislative term for the sukuk issuer) typically holds land on trust for the certificate holders (the sukuk investors). The issuer secures a land interest through a sale and leaseback—the ijara element. For more detail, see Practice Notes: The structure and elements of a Sukuk transaction and Islamic finance standard documentation in the context of real estate finance transactions. The UK has issued sukuk al ijaras over land, most recently in March 2021. Since a sukuk...

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