Freehold and Fully loaded: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
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imported>Doug Williamson
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Permanent and absolute ownership of land or buildings.
''Bank prudential management.''


In some cases, the owner of a freehold (the freeholder) may choose to lease the property to a tenant.
Fully loaded measures are ones presented by a bank early on a voluntary basis, as if any transitional implementation period had already come to end.


More stringent measures are calculated and reported, ignoring the softening benefit of any transitional implementation period.
Examples include Basel III and CRD IV.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Assets]]
* [[Bank supervision]]
* [[Contract]]
* [[Basel III]]
* [[Contract hire]]
* [[Capital adequacy]]
* [[Contract purchase]]
* [[CRD IV]]
* [[Dry]]
* [[Fully loaded Basel III]]
* [[Finance lease]]
* [[Liquidity Coverage Ratio]]
* [[FLA]]
* [[Leverage Ratio]]
* [[Hire purchase]]
* [[Macroprudential]]
* [[Ijara]]
* [[Microprudential]]
* [[Leasehold]]
* [[Moral hazard]]
* [[Lessee]]
* [[Net stable funding ratio]]
* [[Lessor]]
* [[Too Big To Fail]]
* [[Operating lease]]
* [[Sale and leaseback]]
* [[Tenant]]
* [[Tenure]]
* [[Wet]]

Revision as of 13:10, 11 November 2016

Bank prudential management.

Fully loaded measures are ones presented by a bank early on a voluntary basis, as if any transitional implementation period had already come to end.

More stringent measures are calculated and reported, ignoring the softening benefit of any transitional implementation period.


Examples include Basel III and CRD IV.


See also