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Friday, September 9, 2016
Active Income Definition
‘Active Income’ is earnings out of labor or effort. People engage in thousands vocations and professions to earn active income. Solicitors, doctors, teachers, brokers, potters, goldsmiths are people dedicated to a few examples of vocations.
The essential characteristics, as well as disadvantages of active income, are:
- Requires the direct involvement of the individual concerned.
- Invariably consumes more than a than one-third of the highly valuable maximum available time resource – 24 hours of a day.
- In case of death or disability of the individual active income stops.
- Most importantly it is not available to a person in the old age when one cannot actively work anymore.
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Distinction Between Rate of Interest and Interest Yield
Every loan arrangement has following clearly
specified:
- The loan amount or principal or face value;
- The rate of interest or coupon rate;
- Frequency of payment of interest – quarterly or half yearly or annually;
- Repayment terms, including:
- The date of repayment or redemption or maturity;
- Weather repayable in one shot (bullet repayment) or installments;
- If repayable in installments:
- Frequency;
- The quantum or amount payable;
‘Rate of Interest’ is the rate at which
the borrower agrees to pay interest on the loan amount or principal outstanding
or the face value of the instrument.
Where the loan or loan instrument, namely
bond is not tradable then the
investor has no option but to hold the instrument till maturity. The borrower
will repay the face value in full. During the loan period the investor will
receive the interest at the specified rate of interest. In this case there is
question of yield or we can express
the same thing in another way that the rate of interest and yield are one and
the same.
Bond Example |
When a company borrows through marketable
securities like bonds, interest yield
comes into play, because the bond can be purchased at a price more or less than
the face value. Interest yield, therefore is the rate of interest actually
earned by the investor on the amount invested. Following example makes the
aforesaid amply clear:
Example Showing Interest Yield |
In conclusion, ‘Rate of Interest’ is the
specified rate of interest on the face
value of the loan or bond, whereas ‘Interest Yield’ is the rate of interest actually realized on the amount really
paid for purchasing the bond in the open market.