Both shareholders and debenture holders are stakeholders in a company, but they hold different types of financial interests. Shareholders own equity in the company and can benefit from profits through dividends and capital appreciation, while debenture holders are creditors who lend money and receive fixed interest payments. Both groups have a vested interest in the company's performance, but they differ in their claims on assets and priority in case of liquidation, with debenture holders typically having a higher claim than shareholders. Additionally, both can influence company decisions, though shareholders usually have more voting rights.
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Debenture holders will get preference over preference shareholders
No,debenture holders are not treated as members. Debentures are mere debts and debenture holders are just creditors.They give their money to the company at a fixed interest rate.Debenture holders being creditors get guaranteed interest, as agreed, whether the company makes profit or not. Also debenture holders have no right to attend and vote at the meetings of the share holders. Answered By:- Karunakar Gautam DCE Student
share holders is the differnece of not share holders
It is a formal legal document/contract that outlines the terms of the debenture issue between issuer and holders. States concerns to maturity date, interest rate, interest payment , protective provisions and any other terms & conditions between issuer & holders....
No, A debenture bond owner is just like any other bond owner. A debenture bond is an uninsured bond. The owner of a bond is just lending their money to a company for a long-term period. A bond is an example of a long-term debt. An owner of a company would be an example of an equity such as a stockholder (common, or preferred).
In law, a debenture is a document that either creates a debt or acknowledges it. In corporate finance, the term is used for a medium- to long-term debt instrument used by large companies to borrow money. In some countries the term is used interchangeably with bond, loan stock or note. A debenture is thus like a certificate of loan or a loan bond evidencing the fact that the company is liable to pay a specified amount with interest and although the money raised by the debentures becomes a part of the company's capital structure, it does not become share capital..Debentures are generally freely transferable by the debenture holder. Debenture holders have no rights to vote in the company's general meetings of shareholders, but they may have separate meetings or votes e.g. on changes to the rights attached to the debentures. The interest paid to them is a charge against profit in the company's financial statements.Do your homework kid.
Certain debentures are made out in the names of the particular persons whose names appear in the register of debenture holders. Such debentures which appear in this register are known as "Registered Debentures". They are transferable in the same way as shares. Interest as well as the debenture amount in these cases is payable only to the registered holders.
All IMF share holders are in the developing world.
A convertible debenture is a type of convertible bond. However, a debenture is unsecured debt, which means that there is no collateral for the bond. The alternative to a debenture would be a secured bond such as a mortgage bond that would be secured by real estate. If the company goes out of business, the collateral for the secured bonds would be used to pay off those bonds and the holders of the debentures would be paid from whatever is leftover. Most convertible bonds are debentures.
there is no limit to the number of share holders in a company.
They don't have to be shareholders - but they usually are.
Debentures are credit instruments. Companies have to pay fixed interest to the debentures holders even though the company is running on loss. An the time of liquidation also the company have to repay the amount to debenture holders before paying it to share holders.