If they issue treasury bonds (in the case of the US Fed).
They can refuse if the loan outstanding is much more than the collateral provided. Ex: If you have a loan outstanding of 100,000$ and you have provided a collateral of 50,000$ you cannot expect the bank to release any collateral. Lets say your outstanding is only $30,000 then you can expect the bank to release a certain portion of the collateral atleast $20,000
The car itself
You cannot use check's are collateral. Either cash or bank deposit receipts or property can be used as collateral. Usually check's have a validity period of 6 months after which they are useless. So banks would not accept them as collateral
Bank Overdraft as Liability by Kayors Yes, a bank overdraft are classified as a current liability. What happens here is withdrawls from the bank exceed deposits. The lending institution, usually the bank, would allow an extension of credit in such a case. The company is usually expected to pay within short-term and it results in negative balance in company's bank account. That is the reason for the overdraft being classified as a current liability.
If they issue treasury bonds (in the case of the US Fed).
what are the types of collateral securities used in bank lending
They can refuse if the loan outstanding is much more than the collateral provided. Ex: If you have a loan outstanding of 100,000$ and you have provided a collateral of 50,000$ you cannot expect the bank to release any collateral. Lets say your outstanding is only $30,000 then you can expect the bank to release a certain portion of the collateral atleast $20,000
The word collateral in business is that the bank has rights to take away your collateral or something that you put in stock that you own. For example, John owns a farm and he took a loan. The problem is that he didn't deposit his loan in the bank back, so the bank took his collateral that he put in the bank if he didn't pay his loan back. So that is why the bank has John's farm. So I prefer that if you take a loan, then pay your loan back. Or else your collateral is bye-bye.
If it is with the same bank/financier then - Yes (Depending on how much loan you already have and how much collateral you have provided) Ex: Lets say you have a bank CD of $100,000/- as a collateral for a loan of $50,000 then the bank may give you extra loan against that CD. But if you already have a loan of $150,000 then the bank may not give you any further loans on the same collateral If with a different bank/financier then - No. If you provide something as collateral you need to submit the original docs to the bank. So any other bank may not grant you loans on that collateral.
For Bank: Liability For You: Asset
Cash at the bank is an asset for you but a liability for the bank if it is held in a checking or regular savings account.
The bank required me to provide collateral, such as my car, in order to secure the loan.
what is external liability all debts that are external from the business eg. bank loan,bank overdraft,
The car itself
No
You cannot use check's are collateral. Either cash or bank deposit receipts or property can be used as collateral. Usually check's have a validity period of 6 months after which they are useless. So banks would not accept them as collateral