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| Acceptance Certificate |
| When leased property is delivered and installed, the
lessee (since it is in physical possession of, and
using, the leased property) will acknowledge its
acceptance and authorize the lessor, in writing, to pay
the supplier. The lessee's authorization to pay the
supplier is indicated on an Acceptance Certificate form. |
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| Balloon Payment |
| A mandatory payment to be made by the lessee at the
expiration of the initial term of the lease transaction.
Use of a balloon payment in a lease will have the effect
of reducing the periodic lease payment "versus" the
periodic lease payment on a $1.00 Buyout lease. |
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| Bargain Purchase Option |
| A provision in a lease giving the lessee the right
to purchase the subject leased property for a price that
is less than its anticipated fair market value at the
expiration of the initial term. |
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| Broker |
| A Lease Broker is an intermediary between the lessee
and lessor. The Lease Broker seeks to arrange a lease
transaction, with sufficient mark-up or spread, and then
place the lease transaction with a lessor for a fee. A
Lease Broker will oftentimes present himself or herself
(to a lessee or supplier) as a lessor. Lease Brokers are
typically small-time operators and oftentimes work out
of their homes (dialing-for-dollars). A typical Lease
Broker has little, if any, capital. Our words of caution
would be, "know who you're doing business with and think
twice before giving a Lease Broker any money." |
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| Coterminous |
| Two or more leases that reach the expiration of
their initial term at the same time. |
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| Cross Corporate Guaranty |
| A guarantee by one corporation to fulfill all of the
lease obligations of another corporation (lessee),
should the lessee default under the subject lease. |
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| Fair Market Value ("FMV") Purchase
Option |
| FMV is the price a willing buyer (who is neither a
used property dealer nor reseller) would pay for the
leased property in an arm's length transaction to a
willing seller under no compulsion to sell. FMV shall be
determined on the basis that the leased property has
been properly maintained; the leased property is assumed
to be installed and/or in full service and valued on an
installed basis; and the cost of removal of the leased
property is not deducted from the valuation. |
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| FAS #13 |
| This is the Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards No. 13 entitled "Accounting for Leases". This
Statement sets forth the accounting standards for how
parties to a leasing transaction should account for such
transaction. |
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| FASB |
| This is the Financial Accounting Standards Board
("FASB"). One responsibility of the FASB is to
promulgate Statements of Financial Accounting Standards
that form the basis for United States generally accepted
accounting principles. |
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| FAZ-BEE |
| See FASB. |
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| Financial Statements |
| Financial statements are financial reports that
reflect a company's financial performance over a period
of time and financial position as of a point in time.
Financial statements may be Audited, Reviewed/Compiled
or Internally Prepared by the company. Audited financial
statements are of a higher quality, as the company's
independent accountants (Certified Public Accountants)
have performed a thorough examination of the company's
books and records, including testing of internal
controls. The purpose of the independent accountants
audit examination is to render a report where they will
express their opinion on the financial statements.
Audited financial statements include the Auditor's
Report, a Balance Sheet, Income Statement, Statement of
Cash Flows and Footnotes. |
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|
| Independent 3rd Party Lessor |
| An Independent 3rd Party Lessor is a lessor that is
independent as to the supplier/vendor/manufacturer
("Supplier"). After the end-user/lessee makes its own
independent selection of the property that will be
leased, the Independent 3rd Party Lessor and lessee will
negotiate the terms of the leasing contract. The
Independent 3rd Party Lessor is solely the source of
leasing services. |
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| Investment Grade Credit |
| An investment grade credit is a company that obtains
a high rating from one of the recognized credit agencies
- such as Standard & Poor's. |
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| Lease Documents |
The lease documents are all of the written documents
that the parties have jointly negotiated and mutually
agreed-upon and, collectively, form the lease contract.
Typically, the collective lease contract will be
comprised of:
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1.) |
Lease Agreement |
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2.) |
Lease Schedule |
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3.) |
Addenda, if any, to Lease Agreement and/or
Lease Schedule |
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4.) |
Letter Agreement(s) |
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5.) |
Delivery Order and Acceptance
Certificate |
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6.) |
Casualty Schedule |
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7.) |
UCC-1 Financing Statements |
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8.) |
Certificate of Incumbency and Authority |
The Lease Agreement functions as a master lease
agreement, which allows for the parties to easily attach
additional Lease Schedules in the future. |
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| Lease Rate Factor |
| This is the percentage which when multiplied by the
total leased property cost yields the net periodic
rental payment amount - e.g., .03000 (x) $100,000 =
$3,000 net monthly lease payment. In the event the total
leased property cost is either not exactly known or
changes, having the lease rate factor allows for a quick
recalculation of the net monthly lease payment. |
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| Lease Term |
| Defined as the fixed initial term of the lease.
Generally, depending on a lessee's creditworthiness,
software is leased over 24, 36 or 48 months. |
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| Lease Types |
Under FAS #13 there are two lease types for a lessee
- (1) Capital Leases and (2) Operating Leases. FAS #13
sets forth four criteria for distinguishing between a
Capital Lease or Operating Lease - at the inception of
the lease, if a lease meets one or more of the following
four criteria, the lease shall be classified as a
Capital Lease by the lessee. Otherwise, the lease shall
be classified as an Operating Lease.
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a. |
The lease transfers
ownership of the leased property to the lessee by
the end of the lease term. |
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b. |
The lease contains a bargain
purchase option. |
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c. |
The lease term is equal to 75% or
more of the estimated economic life of the leased
property. |
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d. |
The present value at the beginning
of the lease term of the minimum lease payments
equals or exceeds 90% of leased property's then
fair value. A lessee shall compute the present
value of the minimum lease payments using his
incremental borrowing rate, unless (i) it is
practicable for him/her to learn the implicit rate
computed by the lessor and (ii) the implicit rate
computed by the lessor is less than the lessee's
incremental borrowing rate. If both of these
conditions are met, the lessee shall use the
implicit rate. |
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| Middle Market Credit |
| A lessee without an investment grade credit rating,
but generally with revenues greater than $50 million
annually. |
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| Off-Balance-Sheet Lease |
| A leasing transaction is considered
off-balance-sheet to the lessee when the lease meets the
Operating Lease classification under FAS #13. Under FAS
#13 guidelines, an Operating Lease requires footnote
disclosure only and the lessee will record rent expense
on its Income Statement. |
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| Prime Rate |
| The rate of interest that banks charge their most
creditworthy customers. |
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| Purchase Option |
| An option granted to the lessee to purchase the
leased property at the expiration of the applicable
lease term (e.g., FMV Purchase Option). |
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| Sale-Leaseback |
| A sale-leaseback transaction is a lease transaction
wherein the lessee sells property (that the lessee owns)
to the lessor and the lessor, in turn, leases the
property back to the lessee. |
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| Supplier |
| The entity that provides the leased property to the
end-user/lessee. A Supplier can be the manufacturer,
vendor, value-added-remarketer, integrator, or
other. |
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| Vendor Leasing Group |
| A Vendor Leasing Group or Vendor Lessor are a
vendor's leasing operations - and are often referred to
as a vendor's captive leasing program. A vendor's
captive leasing program is seeking to capture, through
leasing, incremental sales that it would not otherwise
capture. Vendor-lease programs are generally tailored to
higher risk credit profiles, higher rates, and afford
less flexibility. A Vendor Lessor, by definition, is not
an Independent 3rd Party Lessor. |
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