for+one's+interest

  • 121interest rate swap — A financial instrument representing a transaction in which two parties agree to swap or exchange net cash flows, on agreed upon dates, for an agreed upon period of time, for interest on an agreed upon principal amount. The agreed upon principal… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 122Interest in possession trust — An interest in possession trust is a form of legal arrangement which gives a person a present right to the present enjoyment of something [ Viscount Dilhorne in Pearson v IRC [1980] STC 318 at 323] . At least one of the beneficiaries of this type …

    Wikipedia

  • 123Interest-only loan — An interest only loan is a loan in which for a set term the borrower pays only the interest on the principal balance, with the principal balance unchanged. At the end of the interest only term the borrower may enter an interest only mortgage, pay …

    Wikipedia

  • 124Interest Rate Swap — An agreement between two parties (known as counterparties) where one stream of future interest payments is exchanged for another based on a specified principal amount. Interest rate swaps often exchange a fixed payment for a floating payment that …

    Investment dictionary

  • 125interest — I UK [ˈɪntrəst] / US noun Word forms interest : singular interest plural interests *** Get it right: interest: When the noun interest means a feeling of wanting to know more about something , it is followed by the preposition in, not for: Wrong:… …

    English dictionary

  • 126interest — I n. concern curiosity 1) to arouse, generate, pique, stir up; revive interest (in) 2) to hold smb. s interest 3) to demonstrate, display, evince, manifest, show interest 4) to express; take an interest in (she took a keen interest in the… …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 127interest — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 desire to learn/hear more about sb/sth ADJECTIVE ▪ avid, close, considerable, consuming, deep, great, intense, keen, lively …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 128Interest sensitivity gap — The interest sensitivity gap was one of the first techniques used in asset liability management to manage interest rate risk. The use of this technique was initiated in the middle 1970s in the United States when rising interest rates in 1975 1976 …

    Wikipedia