Secured loan: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "A loan where the borrower grants the lender a security interest over its property to mitigate the credit risk. A home loan is a great example. The Lender gives you m..."
 
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A home loan is a great example. The Lender gives you money; you grant the lender a [[mortgage]] over the title to your house.
A home loan is a great example. The Lender gives you money; you grant the lender a [[mortgage]] over the title to your house.


Not all forms of [[collateral]] are [[security interest]]s of course: [[title transfer collateral arrangements]] for very good example. So something can resemble a secured loan without actually being one.  
Not all forms of [[collateral]] are [[security interest]]s of course: [[title transfer collateral arrangement]]s, for very good example. So something can resemble a secured loan without actually being one.  


A [[repo]] resembles a [[secured loan]], but isn’t one.
A [[repo]] resembles a [[secured loan]], but isn’t either secured or, for that matter, a [[loan]].  Likewise, a [[stock loan]] is not a loan and nor is it secured, unless you are using the new [[pledge GMSLA]] form, in which case it is secured, but still is not a loan.

Revision as of 13:03, 3 December 2018

A loan where the borrower grants the lender a security interest over its property to mitigate the credit risk.

A home loan is a great example. The Lender gives you money; you grant the lender a mortgage over the title to your house.

Not all forms of collateral are security interests of course: title transfer collateral arrangements, for very good example. So something can resemble a secured loan without actually being one.

A repo resembles a secured loan, but isn’t either secured or, for that matter, a loan. Likewise, a stock loan is not a loan and nor is it secured, unless you are using the new pledge GMSLA form, in which case it is secured, but still is not a loan.