|
Common leasing terms provided by the Canadian Finance and Leasing Association.
APR |
See Annual Percentage Rate |
ASSET-BASED FINANCING |
The financing of equipment and vehicles and of related items or services,
primarily by way of lease, but also by secured loan or conditional sales contract.(CFLA) |
ASSET SCHEDULE |
A document that describes in detail the asset being leased. It may
also state the lease term, commencement date, repayment schedule and location of
the asset. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE |
The total carrying cost paid by a consumer lessee over the term of
a consumer lease expressed as an annual rate. For the purposes of statutory consumer
cost of credit disclosure requirements, the APR is intended to be similar to the
cost of borrowing charges on a consumer loan. (Turning the Lights on Leasing, a Consumer
Guide to Vehicle Leasing) |
BALLOON PAYMENTS |
Larger than normal payments, usually occurring at the end of the
lease term (sometimes called a "bullet"). (Leasing in Canada [Third Editioon],
Ralph Selby FCA, Butterworths, 1999 |
BARGAIN PURCHASE OPTION
[see also Bargain Renewal Option, Fair
Market Purchase Option, Fixed Purchase Option, and Purchase Option] |
A provision allowing the lessee, at its option, to purchase the leased
property for a price which is substantially lower than the expected fair value of
the property at the date the option becomes exercisable. (KPMG LLP)
A lease provision allowing the lessee, at its option, to purchase the equipment
for a price predetermined at lease inception, that is substantially lower than the
expected fair market value at the date the option can be exercised. (US Equipment
Leasing Association)
An option given to the lessee to purchase the leased property at a price that is
less than the expected fair market value so that, at the inception of the lease,
it is reasonable to assume that the lessee will if acting rationally exercise the
option to purchase. (Blake, Cassels
& Graydon LLP) |
BIG-TICKET |
A market segment generally represented by lease financings over $1
million (over US$2 million in the United States - U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
BROKER |
A company or person who arranges, for a fee, transactions between
lessees and lessors of an asset. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
CCA |
See Capital Cost Allowance |
CCA RECAPTURE |
See Capital Cost Allowance Recapture |
CICA HANDBOOK |
Authoritative handbook containing the current pronouncements of the
Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) on specific accounting and auditing
issues. See also Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. |
CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE (CCA) |
Capital Cost allowance (the annual amount which a taxpayer may deduct
in computing taxable income). (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby,
FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE RECAPTURE |
The excess of the sale price of a leased asset over the asset's remaining
undepreciated capital cost (UCC). If the sale price is less than original cost, this
amount is subject to tax in full. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby,
FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
CAPITAL LEASE
[See Finance Lease; compare Operating Lease] |
An accounting term meaning a lease which transfers substantially
all of the risks and benefits of ownership of the leased property to the lessee.
The criteria set out in the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants handbook
provide that a lease will be treated as a capital lease if it meets any of the following
criteria:
- title passes automatically at the end of the lease term;
- the lease contains a bargain purchase option (i.e. less than fair market value)
- the lease term is greater than 75% of the estimated economic life of the leased
property; or
- the present value of the minimum lease payments is greater than 90% of the leased
property's fair market value at the inception of the lease.
(Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP)
A lease that transfers substantially all of the benefits and risks incident to ownership
of the property to the lessee.
(KPMG LLP) |
CAPITAL TAX |
Tax based on a firm's taxable capital; tax rate varies among provinces
(see also federal Large Corporation Tax) (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph
Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
CAPTIVE |
A frequently-heard industry term used to describe the sales finance
division or subsidiary of a manufacturer. The primary role of the captive is to provide
financing to support customers in acquiring the manufacturer's products. |
CASH-FLOW-BASED CREDIT ANALYSIS |
Cash-flow-based credit analysis is a primary financial innovation
of asset-based financing industry. Because a leasing company retains ownership of
the leased equipment or vehicle, at least until the end of the lease, it enables
a lessee to qualify for use of the asset leased based on its generated cash flow
rather than the lessee's credit history, assets or capital base. (CFLA) |
CERTIFICATE OF ACCEPTANCE
(Delivery and Acceptance) |
A document whereby the lessee acknowledges that the equipment to
be lease has been delivered, is acceptable, and has been manufactured or constructed
according to specifications. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
CLOSED-END LEASE
[Compare to Open-end Lease] |
Used generally in vehicle leasing, in a Closed -End Lease, a lessee
makes a set number of lease payments during the term of the lease and returns the
vehicle to the lessor at the end of the lease term. The lessee is not required to
make any additional payments unless there is physical damage to the vehicle, such
as excess wear and tear, or the number of kilometres driven by the lessee is higher
than the kilometre limit set out in the lease. [See also Wear and Tear]. (Turning
the Lights on Leasing - Consumer Guide to Vehicle Leasing)
A lease where at the end of the lease term, the lessee is not obligated to make
any adjustment payments to account for the residual value of the leased property.(Blake
Cassels & Graydon LLP) |
CONDITIONAL SALE
[see also Installment Sale] |
A conditional sale occurs when possession of property is transferred,
but ownership passes only after the sale meets certain conditions, such as full payment
of the purchase price. A conditional sale is not a lease. (PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP) |
CONDITIONAL SALE CONTRACT (CSC) |
A sale agreement for goods by which possession of property is transferred,
but ownership passes only after the sale meets certain conditions, such as full payment
of the purchase price. A conditional sale is not a lease. (Leasing in Canada [Third
Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
|
CONSUMER |
"Consumer means a natural person who is offered, acquires or uses
a good or service primarily for personal, family or household purposes;"
Article 810 of the federal-provincial Agreement on Internal Trade (AIT). |
CONTINGENT RENTAL |
Rental based on a factor other than the passage of time. (KPMG LLP) |
DIRECT FINANCING LEASE |
A capital lease where, at the inception of the lease, the fair value
of the leased property is the same as its carrying amount to the lessor. (KPMG LLP)
Capital leases which provide the lessor with financing income; the lessor is essentially
a financial intermediary.(Leasing in Canada< [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths,
1999)
A non-leveraged lease by a lessor (not a manufacturer or dealer) in which the lease
meets any of the definitional criteria of a capital lease, plus certain additional
criteria. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
ECONOMIC LIFE |
Estimated remaining period during which the property is expected
to be economically usable by one or more users, with normal repairs and maintenance.
(KPMG LLP)
The period during which an asset is expected to have economic value to one or more
users. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
The period of time during which an asset will have economic value and be usable.
(U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
EFFECTIVE LEASE RATE |
The effective rate (to the lessee) of cash flows resulting from a
lease transaction. To compare this rate with a loan interest rate, a company must
include in the cash flows any effect the transactions have on federal tax liabilities.(U.S.
Equipment Leasing Association) |
EQUITY PARTICIPANT |
The owner participant, trustor owner, or grantor owner. (U.S. Equipment
Leasing Association) |
EXECUTORY COSTS |
The costs related to the operation of the leased property (insurance,
property taxes, maintenance) paid to the lessor. (KPMG LLP)
Costs related to the operation of the leased property (e.g. insurance, maintenance
cost, and property taxes). (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA,
Butterworths, 1999) |
EXEMPT PROPERTY |
There are assets that are exempt property from the April 1989 tax
changes and include much office furniture and equipment, computers costing less than
$1 million, furniture and equipment for residential use, automobiles, vans or trucks,
most buildings and railway cars.(Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby,
FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
FAIR MARKET PURCHASE OPTION
[see also Bargain Purchase Option, Bargain
Renew-al Option, Fixed Pur-chase Option, and Purchase Option] |
An option to purchase leased property at the end of the lease term
at its then fair market value. The lessor cannot retain title to the equipment if
the lessee chooses to exercise the purchase option. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
FAIR MARKET VALUE |
The amount that a "reasonable person" would pay in a competitive
market. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
FAIR VALUE OF THE PROPERTY |
The price for which the leased property could be sold in an arms's
length transaction (usually normal the selling price if manufacturer or dealer or
the cost to the lessor). (KPMG LLP) |
FINANCE LEASE
[See Capital Lease; compare Operating Lease] |
Typically, a finance lease is a full-payout, noncancellable agreement,
in which the lessee is responsible for maintenance, taxes, and insurance. (U.S. Equipment
Leasing Association) |
FIXED PURCHASE OPTION
{see also Bargain Purchase Op-tion, Bargain
Renewal Option, Fair Market Purchase Option, and Purchase Option] |
An option given to the lessee to purchase the leased property form
the lessor on the option date for a guaranteed price, determined at the inception
at the lease. (Blakes Cassels & Graydon LLP) |
FULL PAYOUT LEASE |
A lease in which the total of the lease payments pays back to the
lessor the entire cost of the leased property including financing, overhead and a
reasonable rate of return, with little or no dependence on a residual value. (Blakes
Cassels & Graydon LLP)
Lease which provides for recovery of the full cost of an asset to the lessor over
the lease term plus a return to the lessor, by way of rent plus guaranteed residual.(Leasing
in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
A lease in which the lessor recovers, though the lease payments, all costs incurred
in the lease plus an acceptable rate of return, without any reliance upon the leased
asset's future residual value. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
GAAP |
See Generally Accepted Accounting Principles |
GOODS & SERVICES TAX (GST) |
A national value-added tax imposed on taxable supply of goods and
services provided in Canada. Supply is defined to include sale, transfer, barter,
exchange, licence, rental, lease,gift or disposition. (PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP) |
GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (GAAP) |
Accounting practices which have been codified in the (Canadian Institute
of Chartered Accountants) CICA Handbook, or which are in common usage. (Leasing in
Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
HELL-OR-HIGH-WATER CLAUSE |
These contractual provisions essentially require that the lessee
perform its obligations under the lease without right of setoff, deduction, abatement,
compensation or counter-claim for any reason whatsoever. For the lessor, the purpose
is to ensure that it will invariably receive its monthly rental payment. Gowling
Lafleur Henderson LLP, Montréal.
[See also: "Hell or High Water" Clauses in Equipment Leases ~ their enforceability
in Québec", by David B. Kierans, Partner, Business Law Group, Gowling Lafleur
Henderson LLP, Montréal, March 2001, at: www.cfla-acfl.ca/cfla-hellhighwater.pdf.]
A clause in a lease that reiterates the unconditional obligation of the lessee to
pay rent for the entire term of the lease, regardless of any event affecting the
asset or any change in the circumstances or the lessee. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
IMPLICIT INTEREST RATE |
See Interest Rate Implicit in the Lease |
INDENTURE OF TRUST |
An agreement between the owner trustee and the indenture trustee:
The owner trustee mortgages the equipment and assigns the lease and rental payments
under the lease as security for amounts due to the lenders. Same as security agreement
or mortgage. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
INSURANCE |
Insurance means the undertaking by one person to indemnify another
person against loss or liability for loss in respect of a certain risk or peril to
which the object of the insurance is exposed, or to pay a sum of money or other thing
of value upon the happening of a certain event. (Ontario Insurance Act)
A contractual agreement between an insurance company and an insured where the company
promises to pay for losses from property damage or bodily injury caused by a covered
peril. The insured promises to pay to the insurance company in return for coverage.
You can only insure against future accidental events. The main principle of insurance
is that the insured is indemnified by the insurance company after a loss. This means
that the insured is paid no more and no less than the amount of the loss. The insurance
policy is the written evidence of the contract and thus contains the terms and conditions
of the contract. (Hunter Keilty Muntz & Beatty) |
INSURANCE PREMIUMS |
Premium means the single or periodical payment under a contract of
insurance and includes dues, assessments, administration fees paid for the administration
or servicing of such contract, and other considerations. (Ontario Insurance Act)
Premiums are determined by applying the law of averages and the theory of probability
to past experience. (Hunter Keilty Muntz &
Beatty) |
INSURANCE RISK |
Risk means a chance of loss.
Speculative Risk - exists when there is a chance of loss and also a chance for profit
i.e. gambling at a casino - these risks cannot be insured against.
Pure Risk - exists when there is a chance of loss but no chance of profit i.e..:
driving an asset- these risks can be insured against.
Broadly, there are three choices:
(1) Eliminate the risk: implement preventive measures to reduce risk i.e..: fire
alarms, sprinklers, seat belts.
(2) Assume the risk: bear the cost of losses as they occur or set aside an amount
of money periodically in order to self insure against losses.
(3) Transfer the risk: transfer the risk to someone whose financial capability to
handle a loss is greater than your own. This risk transfer comes at a price and is
called insurance. (Hunter Keilty Muntz & Beatty) |
INITIAL DIRECT COSTS |
The costs incurred by a lessor directly associated with negotiating
and executing a specific leasing transaction (i.e., commissions, legal, documentation).
(KPMG LLP) |
INTEREST RATE IMPLICIT IN THE LEASE |
The discount rate that, at the inception of the lease, causes the
aggregate present value of (a) the lessor's minimum lease payments excluding executory
costs; and (b) the unguaranteed value accruing to the benefit of the lessor to be
equal to the fair value of the property at the inception of the lease. (KPMG LLP)
|
INTERNAL RATE OF RETURN |
The rate of return on an investment, calculated by finding the discount
rate which equals the present value of future cash flows to the initial cost of the
investment. (Leasing in Canada<
[Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
INSTALLMENT SALE
[See Conditional Sale] |
An installment sale occurs when a vendor transfers ownership and
possession to the purchaser immediately. The purchaser agrees to make payments over
a period of time. An installment sale is not a lease. (PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP) |
LCT |
See Large Corporation Tax |
LARGE CORPORATION TAX |
Large Corporation Tax, a federal tax imposed on corporations with
capital over $10 million. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths,
1999) |
LEASE |
A contract in which one party conveys the use of an asset to another
party for a specific period of time at a predetermined rate. (U.S. Equipment Leasing
Association) |
LEASE TERM |
The lease term is the fixed non-cancellable term of the lease plus:
- all periods covered by bargain renewal options;
- all periods for which failure to renew would impose on the lessee a penalty sufficiently
large that renewal appears reasonably assured;
- all periods covered by ordinary renewal options where the lessee has undertaken
to guarantee the lessor's debt related to the leased property;
- all periods covered by ordinary renewal options preceding the date on which a
bargain purchase option is exercisable; and
- all periods representing renewals or extensions of the lease at the lessor's
option. (KPMG LLP)
|
LEASE RATE
(Rental Payment) |
The periodic rental payment to a lessor for the use
of assets. Or the lease rate as the implicit interest rate in minimum lease payments.
(U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
LESSEE |
The party who is obligated to pay rental to the lessor in exchange
for use and possession of the leased property. (Blake Cassels &
Graydon LLP)
The party who obtains the use of an asset through a lease agreement. (Leasing in
Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
The user of the equipment being leased. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
LESSEE'S INCREMENTAL BORROWING RATE |
The interest rate that, at the inception of the lease, the lessee
would have incurred to borrow (using similar terms) to purchase the leased asset.
(KPMG LLP) |
LESSOR |
The party who has legal title to the leased property and grants the
lessee the right to use and possess the leased property in exchange for a rental
amount. (Blake Cassels & Graydon LLP)
The party who owns the leased asset. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby,
FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
LEVERAGED LEASE |
In this type of lease, the lessor provides an equity portion (usually
20 to 40 percent) of the equipment cost and lenders provide the balance on a nonrecourse
debt basis. The lessor receives the tax benefits of ownership. (U.S. Equipment Leasing
Association) |
MASTER LEASE |
A contract where the lessee leases currently needed assets and is
able to acquire other assets under the same basic terms and conditions without negotiating
a new contract. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
MIDDLE MARKET (or Mid-Ticket) |
A market segment generally represented by financings over $100,000
but under $1 million. (Over US$100,000 but under US$2 million in the United States
- U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
MINIMUM LEASE PAYMENTS |
Lessee:
The minimum rental payments called for by the lease over the lease term; plus
- any guarantee by the lessee of the residual value of the leased property at the
end of the lease term; and
- any penalty required to be paid by the lessee for failure to renew or extend
the lease at the end of the lease term.
If a bargain purchase option exists, then only the minimum rental payments and the
bargain purchase option are included in the lease payments.
Lessor:
The minimum lease payments for the lessee as described above and any residual value
or rental payments beyond the lease term guaranteed by a third party unrelated
to the lessee or lessor.
(KPMG LLP) |
NET LEASE |
A lease wherein payments to the lessor do not include insurance and
maintenance, which are paid separately by the lessee. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
NET PRESENT VALUE |
The sum of a series of future cash flows, discounted at an appropriate
rate to a current value. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths,
1999) |
NONRECOURSE LOAN |
In a leveraged lease, the lenders cannot look at the lessor for repayment.
The lender's only recourse is to the lessee and, therefore, the lessee's credit rating
is of prime importance. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
OPEN-END LEASE
[Compare Closed-end Lease] |
Used generally in vehicle leasing, in an Open-End Lease, a lessee
makes a set number of payments during the term of the lease and returns the vehicle
to the lessor at the end of the lease term. Then an adjustment is made. The lessee
is required to make an additional payment covering the difference between the actual
value of the vehicle at the end of the lease and the residual value stated on the
lease contract. If, however, the actual value of the vehicle is more than the residual
value stated in the lease, the lessee is entitled to the difference. [See also Residual
Value]. (Turning the Lights on Leasing - Consumer Guide to Vehicle Leasing)
A lease where at the end of the lease term, the lessee is required to make an adjustment
payment covering the difference between the actual value of the leased property at
the end of the lease and the residual value stated on the lease contract. If the
actual value of the leased property is greater than the residual value stated on
the lease, then the lessee is entitled to the difference. (Blake Cassels & Graydon
LLP)
A lease where a lessee guarantees that the lessor will realize a minimum value from
the sale of the asset at the end of the lease. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
OPERATING LEASE
[Compare to Capital or Finance Lease] |
A lease which does not transfer substantially all the benefits and
risks incident to ownership of property. (KPMG LLP)
Any lease that is not a capital lease. These are generally used for short term leases
of equipment. The lessee can acquire the use of equipment for just a fraction of
the useful life of the asset. Additional services such as maintenance and insurance
may be provided by the lessor. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
PACKAGER |
The leasing company, investment banker, or broker who arranges a
leveraged lease. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
PRESCRIBED PROPERTY |
Refers to exempt property and assets with a fair market value of
$25,000 or less per lease. It is used for the purposes of the federal Income Tax
Act Section 16.1 lessor/lessee election introduced in April 1989.(Leasing in Canada
[Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
PRESCRIBED RATE |
This is the interest rate applicable to determine the portion of
lease payments that are treated as notional repayments of principal under the April
1989 income tax revisions. The rate is set monthly and is one point greater than
the long-term Government of Canada bond rate of the month before the immediately
preceding month. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths,
1999) |
PRESENT VALUE
|
The current equivalent of payments or a stream
of payments to be received at various time in the future. The present value will
vary with discount interest factor applied to future payments. (U.S. Equipment
Leasing Association) |
PURCHASE OPTION
[See also Bargain Purchase Option, Fair Market Purchase
Option, Fixed Purchase Option] |
A provision by which a lessee has the right to purchase the equipment at the end
of the lease. The purchase option may be stated at a specified amount or at fair
market value. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
PUT OPTION |
The requirement to purchase an asset at a particular time and at a predetermined
price. In a lease transaction, this is a lessor's right to require the lessee (or
some third party) to purchase the asset at the end of the lease term. (U.S. Equipment
Leasing Association) |
RENTAL PAYMENT |
See Lease Payment |
RESIDUAL VALUE |
The estimated fair value of the leased property at the end of the lease term. (KPMG
LLP)
The value of leased property at the end of the lease term. (Leasing in Canada [Third
Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
The residual value is, unless otherwise stated on the lease, the estimated wholesale
value of the leased vehicle at the end of the lease. (Turning the Lights on Leasing
- Consumer Guide to Vehicle Leasing)
The value of an asset at the conclusion of a lease. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
SALE LEASEBACK |
The sale of a property with the purchaser leasing the property back to the seller. (KPMG
LLP)
The sale property where the purchaser leases it back to the seller. (Leasing
in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
An arrangement whereby equipment is purchased by a lessor from the company owning
and using it. The lessor then becomes the owner and leases it back to the original
owner, who continues to use the equipment. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association)
A lessee sells property owned by it to the lessor and simultaneously leases the
same property back from the lessor. The usual objectives are: (a) to free cash in
the amount of the purchase price for other uses by the lessee; (b) for benefits not
otherwise available, such as a deduction for rental payments instead of depreciation.
(Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP) |
SALES-TYPE LEASE |
A capital lease which at the inception of the lease, the fair value of the leased
property is greater or less than its carrying amount resulting in a profit or loss. (KPMG
LLP)
Lease normally arising when a manufacturer or dealer uses leasing to effect a sale
of its products; such lease transactions give rise to two types of income: the initial
profit or loss on the sale of the product at the inception of the lease, and finance
income over the lease term. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby,
FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
A lease by a lessor who is the manufacturer or dealer, in which the lease meets
the definitional criteria of a capital lease or direct financing lease. (U.S.
Equipment Leasing Association) |
SKIP PAYMENTS |
Payments which are not required to be made during a specified interval (e.g., the
first payment may be due in 90 days, which would be a
"three-month skip".(Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby,
FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
SMALL-TICKET LEASING |
Typically, financing transactions under $100,000. (Under US$100,000 in the United
States - U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
SPECIFIED LEASING PROPERTY |
Essentially, depreciable property leased by a lessor to a lessee for a term of more
than one year. Leasing having a fair value of $25,000 or less per lease are excluded
and it does not include intangible property, including systems' software, certified
feature films or certified productions.(Leasing in Canada [Third Edition],
Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
STRETCH LEASE |
An agreement whereby the lessee has the option, at the end of the primary lease
term, to either extend the term of the lease or purchase the asset; should lessees
choose to extend the term, they have no purchase option later; the present value
of the extended rent usually equals the value of the option price. (Leasing in
Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
SYNTHETIC LEASE |
One of a variety of agreements designed to simulate a lease.(Leasing
in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
[See also: "Synthetic Leases in Canada" by Jeffrey Taylor at http://executivecaliber.ws/sys-tmpl/syntheticleasesincanada] |
TRUSTEE |
A bank or trust company that holds title to or a security interest in leased property
for the benefit of the lessee, lessor, and/or creditors of the lessor. A leveraged
lease often has two trustees: an owner trustee and an indenture trustee. (U.S.
Equipment Leasing Association) |
UNGUARANTEED RESIDUAL VALUE |
That portion of the residual value of leased property which is not guaranteed (or
is guaranteed by a party related to the lessor). (KPMG LLP) |
UPGRADING |
The replacement of an asset with a similar but more serviceable asset, generally
in an attempt to forestall or correct obsolescence.(Leasing in Canada [Third
Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
VENDOR LEASING |
The working relationship between a financing source and a vendor to provide financing
to stimulate the vendor's sales. The financing source offers leases or conditional
sales contracts to the vendor's customers. The vendor leasing firm substitutes as
the captive finance company of a manufacturers or distributor through the extension
of leasing to customers, provisions for credit checking, and performance of collections
and operational administration. Also known as lease asset servicing or vendor programs.(U.S.
Equipment Leasing Association) |
WEAR AND TEAR |
Every vehicle will experience normal wear and tear from every day use. Excess wear
and tear is over and above expected normal wear and tear. The lease may describe
what excess wear and tear means. Examples of excess wear and tear include: bald or
mis-matched tires, body damage, missing parts or interior rips and tears. (Turning
the Lights on Leasing - Consumer Guide to Vehicle Leasing) |
PRESENT VALUE |
The current equivalent of payments or a stream of payments to be
received at various time in the future. The present value will vary with discount
interest factor applied to future payments. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association)
|
PURCHASE OPTION
[See also Bargain Purchase Option, Fair Market Purchase Option,
Fixed Purchase Option] |
A provision by which a lessee has the right to purchase the equipment
at the end of the lease. The purchase option may be stated at a specified amount
or at fair market value. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association)
|
PUT OPTION |
The requirement to purchase an asset at a particular time and at
a predetermined price. In a lease transaction, this is a lessor's right to require
the lessee (or some third party) to purchase the asset at the end of the lease term. (U.S.
Equipment Leasing Association)
|
RENTAL PAYMENT |
See Lease Payment |
RESIDUAL VALUE |
The estimated fair value of the leased property at the end of the
lease term. (KPMG LLP)
The value of leased property at the end of the lease term. (Leasing in Canada [Third
Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)The residual value is, unless otherwise
stated on the lease, the estimated wholesale value of the leased vehicle at the end
of the lease. (Turning the Lights on Leasing - Consumer Guide to Vehicle Leasing)
The value of an asset at the conclusion of a lease. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
SALE LEASEBACK |
The sale of a property with the purchaser leasing the property back
to the seller. (KPMG LLP)
The sale property where the purchaser leases it back to the seller. (Leasing
in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
An arrangement whereby equipment is purchased by a lessor from the company owning
and using it. The lessor then becomes the owner and leases it back to the original
owner, who continues to use the equipment. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association)
A lessee sells property owned by it to the lessor and simultaneously leases the
same property back from the lessor. The usual objectives are: (a) to free cash in
the amount of the purchase price for other uses by the lessee; (b) for benefits not
otherwise available, such as a deduction for rental payments instead of depreciation. (Blake,
Cassels & Graydon LLP) |
SALES-TYPE LEASE |
A capital lease which at the inception of the lease, the fair value
of the leased property is greater or less than its carrying amount resulting in a
profit or loss. (KPMG LLP)
Lease normally arising when a manufacturer or dealer uses leasing to effect a sale
of its products; such lease transactions give rise to two types of income: the initial
profit or loss on the sale of the product at the inception of the lease, and finance
income over the lease term. (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby,
FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
A lease by a lessor who is the manufacturer or dealer, in which the lease meets
the definitional criteria of a capital lease or direct financing lease. (U.S.
Equipment Leasing Association) |
SKIP PAYMENTS |
Payments which are not required to be made during a specified interval
(e.g., the first payment may be due in 90 days, which would be a
"three-month skip". (Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA,
Butterworths, 1999) |
SMALL-TICKET LEASING
| Typically, financing transactions under $100,000. (Under US$100,000
in the United States - U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
SPECIFIED LEASING PROPERTY |
Essentially, depreciable property leased by a lessor to a lessee
for a term of more than one year. Leasing having a fair value of $25,000 or less
per lease are excluded and it does not include intangible property, including systems'
software, certified feature films or certified productions. (Leasing in Canada [Third
Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
STRETCH LEASE |
An agreement whereby the lessee has the option, at the end of the
primary lease term, to either extend the term of the lease or purchase the asset;
should lessees choose to extend the term, they have no purchase option later; the
present value of the extended rent usually equals the value of the option price.
(Leasing in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
SYNTHETIC LEASE |
One of a variety of agreements designed to simulate a lease. (Leasing
in Canada [Third Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999)
[See also: "Synthetic Leases in Canada" by Jeffrey Taylor at http://executivecaliber.ws/sys-tmpl/syntheticleasesincanada] |
TRUSTEE |
A bank or trust company that holds title to or a security interest
in leased property for the benefit of the lessee, lessor, and/or creditors of the
lessor. A leveraged lease often has two trustees: an owner trustee and an indenture
trustee. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
UNGUARANTEED RESIDUAL VALUE |
That portion of the residual value of leased property which is not
guaranteed (or is guaranteed by a party related to the lessor). (KPMG LLP) |
UPGRADING |
The replacement of an asset with a similar but more serviceable asset,
generally in an attempt to forestall or correct obsolescence. (Leasing in Canada [Third
Edition], Ralph Selby, FCA, Butterworths, 1999) |
VENDOR LEASING |
The working relationship between a financing source and a vendor
to provide financing to stimulate the vendor's sales. The financing source offers
leases or conditional sales contracts to the vendor's customers. The vendor leasing
firm substitutes as the captive finance company of a manufacturers or distributor
through the extension of leasing to customers, provisions for credit checking, and
performance of collections and operational administration. Also known as lease asset
servicing or vendor programs. (U.S. Equipment Leasing Association) |
WEAR AND TEAR |
Every vehicle will experience normal wear and tear from every day
use. Excess wear and tear is over and above expected normal wear and tear. The lease
may describe what excess wear and tear means. Examples of excess wear and tear include:
bald or mis-matched tires, body damage, missing parts or interior rips and tears. (Turning
the Lights on Leasing - Consumer Guide to Vehicle Leasing)
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