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GLOSSARY
(Courtesy of ELA - Equipment Leasing
Association)
ACCELERATED COST RECOVERY
SYSTEM (ACRS) (Modified)
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 established
the modified ACRS tax appreciation system prescribing depreciation
methods for each ACRS class in lieu of statutory tables. Equipment is
assigned among 3, 5, 7, 10,15, or 20-year classes depending on ADR
lives.
ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX
(AMT)
An alternative, separate tax
calculation based on the taxpayer's regular taxable income, increased
by the taxpayer's preferences for the year. The resulting amount is
called the alternative minimum taxable income (AMTI). After certain
exemptions and offsets, the taxpayer determines its AMT and is
required to pay the larger of the regular tax or alternative minimum
tax. Among the preferences that can increase the taxpayer's AMTI is
the accelerated portion of depreciation, thereby making it more likely
that a taxpayer that buys equipment may be subject to the AMT rather
than to regular tax.
BARGAIN
PURCHASE OPTION
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.
BIG-TICKET
A market segment, generally dominated
by leveraged leases, represented by lease financing over $2 million.
CAPITAL
LEASE
Type of lease classified and accounted
for by a lessee as a purchase and by the lessor as a sale or
financing, if it meets any one of the following criteria: (a) the
lessor transfers ownership to the lessee at the end of the lease term;
(b) the lease contains an option to purchase the asset at a bargain
price; (c) the lease term is equal to 75 percent or more of the
estimated economic life of the property (exceptions for used property
leased toward the end of its useful life); or (d) the present value of
minimum lease rental payments is equal to 90 percent or more of the
fair market value of the leased asset less related investment tax
credits retained by the lessor. (Also see finance lease.)
CERTIFICATE OF
ACCEPTANCE (Delivery and Acceptance)
A document whereby the lessee
acknowledges that the equipment to be leased has been delivered, is
acceptable, and has been manufactured or constructed according to
specifications.
CONDITIONAL SALE
A situation under the income tax
provisions whereby the actual user is seen as the owner of an asset
for availing the capital allowances. In India, a conditional sale will
include the Hire Purchase transaction.
DIRECT
FINANCING LEASE (Direct Lease)
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.
ECONOMIC
LIFE (Useful Life)
The period of time during which an
asset will have economic value and be usable.
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.
EQUITY PARTICIPANT
The owner participant, trust or owner,
or grantor owner.
EQUIPMENT SCHEDULE
A document that describes in detail the
equipment being leased. It may also state the lease term, commencement
date, repayment schedule and location of the equipment.
FAIR
MARKET PURCHASE OPTION
An option to purchase leased property
at the end of the lease term at its then fair market value. The lessor
does not have the ability to retain title to the equipment if the
lessee chooses to exercise the purchase option.
FIRST AMENDMENT LEASE
The first amendment lease gives the
lessee a purchase option at one or more defined points with a
requirement that the lessee renew or continue the lease if the
purchase option is not exercised. The option price is usually either a
fixed price intended to approximate fair market value or is defined as
fair market value determined by lessee appraisal and subject to a
floor to insure that the lessor's residual position will be covered if
the purchase option is exercised.
If the purchase option is not exercised, then the lease is
automatically renewed for a fixed term (typically 12 or 24 months) at
a fixed rental intended to approximate fair rental value, which will
further reduce the lessor's end-of-term residual position. The lessee
is not permitted to return the equipment on the option exercise date.
If the lease is automatically renewed, then at the expiration of that
initial renewal term, the lessee typically has the right either to
return the equipment without penalty or to renew or purchase at fair
market value.
FINANCE LEASE
Typically, a finance lease is a
full-payout, non-cancelable agreement, in which the lessee is
responsible for maintenance, taxes, and insurance.
FULL PAYOUT LEASE
A lease in which the lessor recovers,
through the lease payments, all costs incurred in the lease plus an
acceptable rate of return, without any reliance upon the leased
equipment's future residual value.
GUIDELINE
LEASE
A lease written under criteria
established by the IRS to determine the availability of tax benefits
to the lessor.
HELL-OR-HIGH-WATER
CLAUSE
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 equipment or any
change in the circumstances of the lessee.
INDEMNITY
CLAUSE
A clause in which the lessee
indemnifies the lessor from loss of tax benefits.
INDENTURE OF TRUST
(Indenture)
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 a security agreement or
mortgage.
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.
LEASE RATE (Rental
Payment)
The periodic rental payment to a lessor
for the use of assets. Others may define lease rate as the implicit
interest rate in minimum lease payments.
LESSEE
The user of the equipment being leased.
LESSOR
The party to a lease agreement who has
legal or tax title to the equipment, grants the lessee the right to
use the equipment for the lease term, and is entitled to the rentals.
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 non-recourse debt basis. The
lessor receives the tax benefits of ownership.
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.
MIDDLE MARKET
A
market segment generally represented by financing under $2 million and
dominated by single investor leases.
NET
LEASE
A lease wherein payments to the lessor
do not include insurance and maintenance, which are paid separately by
the lessee.
NON-RECOURSE LOAN
In a leveraged lease, the lenders
cannot look to the lessor for repayment. The lender's only recourse is
to the lessee and, therefore, the lessee's credit rating is of prime
importance.
OPEN-END
LEASE
A conditional sale lease in which the
lessee guarantees that the lessor will realize a minimum value from
the sale of the asset at the end of the lease.
OPERATING LEASE
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.
PACKAGER
The leasing company, investment banker,
or broker who arranges a leveraged lease.
PRESENT VALUE
The current equivalent of payments or a
stream of payments to be received at various times in the future. The
present value will vary with the discount interest factor applied to
future payments.
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.
PUT OPTION
The requirement to purchase equipment
at a particular time and at a predetermined price. In a lease
transaction, this is a lessor's right to force the lessee (or some
third party) to purchase the equipment at the end of the lease term.
IRS guidelines prohibit put options in tax-oriented leases.
RESIDUAL
VALUE
The value of an asset at the conclusion
of a lease.
SALE-LEASEBACK
An arrangement whereby a lessor
purchases equipment 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.
SALES-TYPE LEASE
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.
SINGLE INVESTOR LEASE
(See Full Payout or Finance Lease.)
A tax-oriented lease whereby the lessor
achieves its desired rate of return via a combination of the rental
payments, depreciation, and the fair market value of the equipment at
the end of the original lease term. Because of the value of the tax
benefit, the rental payments will be lower than for a finance lease.
SMALL-TICKET LEASING
Transactions under $100,000, typically
using conditional sale leases or single investor true leases.
STIPULATED LOSS VALUE
A schedule included in a lease that
states the agreed value of equipment at various times during the term
of the lease and establishes the liability of the lessee to the lessor
in the event that the leased equipment is lost or rendered unusable
during the lease term due to a casualty loss.
SYNTHETIC LEASE
A synthetic lease is basically a
financing structured to be treated as a lease for accounting purposes,
but as a loan for tax purposes. The structure is used by corporations
that are seeking off-balance sheet reporting of their asset based
financing, and that can efficiently use the tax benefits of owning the
financed asset.
TAX
LEASE
A lease wherein the lessor recognizes
the tax incentives provided by the tax laws for investment and
ownership of equipment. Generally, the lease rate factor on tax leases
is reduced to reflect the lessor's recognition of this tax incentive.
TRAC LEASE
A tax-oriented lease of motor vehicles
or trailers that contains a terminal rental adjustment clause and
otherwise complies with the requirements of the tax laws.
TRUE LEASE
A type of transaction that qualifies as
a lease under the Internal Revenue Code. It allows the lessor to claim
ownership and the lessee to claim rental payments as tax deductions.
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.
VENDOR
LEASING
A 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 manufacturer or
distributor through the extension of leasing to customers, provisions
of credit checking, and performance of collections and operational
administration. Also known as lease asset servicing or vendor program
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