From the issuers perspective, a debt security is a method of raising capital....
Any security reflecting the loan of money that must be paid back to the lender in the future, such as a bill, note or bond.
A tradable security that represents borrowed funds (e.g., bond, bill, note or commercial paper) and an obligation to repay those funds.
Any form of corporate security that is reflected as debt on the books of the corporation.
Tradable evidence of borrowing that must be repaid, stating the amount, a specific rate of interest (or discount from the maturity price).
Bonds, bills, notes, and money market mutual funds are all examples of debt securities, which are "IOUs" for money to be repaid to a lender.
Borrowed funds that must be repaid by the entity issuing the debt security.
Any security that represents loaned money that must be repaid to the lender.
A security in which the issuing company generally agrees to repay the principal (typically, the original amount borrowed) and make interest payments according to an agreed schedule.
Tradable evidence of borrowing that must be repaid, stating the amount, a specific maturity date or dates, and usually a specific rate of interest (or discount)for example, a bond, bill, note, or commercial paper.
A security representing borrowed funds that must be repaid by the issuer (eg. bonds, certificates of deposit, debentures). If the Government issues bonds, it is borrowing funds. Purchasers of the bonds are thus lenders to the Government.
security representing money borrowed that must be repaid and having a fixed amount, a specific maturity or maturities, and usually a specific rate of interest of an original purchase discount. For instance, a bill, bond, commercial paper or note.
Securities, such as Treasury Bills and Commercial Paper, that represent money borrowed by the issuer. This money must be repaid by the maturity date at a specified interest rate unless it was an original issue discount purchase. See: Commercial Paper; Original Issue Discount; Treasury Bill
Debt securities are interest-paying bonds that are issued by governments or corporations. Debt securities generally pay a fixed rate of interest over a fixed time period in exchange for the use of the principal. That principal, or par value, is repaid at maturity. US Treasury bills, corporate bonds, commercial paper, and mortgage-backed bonds are examples of debt securities.
A security representing a loan by an investor to an issuer such as a corporation, municipality, the federal government or a federal agency. In return for the loan, the issuer promises to repay the debt on a specified date and to pay interest.
borrowed funds that must be repaid by the issuer e.g. bonds or debentures