 |
Encyclopediacommercial papercommercial paper, type of short-term negotiable instrument, usually an unsecured promissory note, that calls for the payment of money at a specified date. Because it is not backed by collateral, commercial paper is usually issued by major firms whose credit-rating is so good that their notes are immediately accepted for trading. The notes are sold at a discount and mature in from three to six months. Commercial paper is an important source of cash for the issuing firm; it supplements bank loans and is usually payable at a lower rate of interest than the prime discount rate. Strictly speaking, it includes only those instruments that are used in commerce in place of money, as distinguished from paper used in investment, personal, estate, speculative, and public transactions. In addition to promissory notes, commercial paper may include drafts, bills of exchange and checks, acceptances, bills of lading, warehouse receipts, orders for delivery of goods, and express orders. See. N. D. Baxter, The Commercial Paper Market (1969); Steve H. Nickles, Commercial Paper (1988). The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. More on commercial paper from Infoplease:

Infoplease Career Center
Trade Publications FREE to Qualified Professionals.
Global Finance has been providing monthly news and analysis since 1987 about companies and financial institutions that do business around the world. |
Business Solutions article's show readers how to sell new technologies and penetrate growing vertical markets. |
Beyond.com Career Portal Software. © Copyright 2001-2005 Artemis HR, Inc.
|
|