credit contract
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dian Susanti ◽  
Romi Susanto

The purpose of this study was to determine the implementation of credit at PT. Bank Perkreditan Rakyat Samudera Painan. The research method used is a qualitative data analysis method. The result described how credit distribution, credit growth, and credit collectibillity. The result of this study found that the granting of credit at PT. Bank Perkreditan Rakyat Samudera Painan has several stages namely, credit application stage, credit analysis stage, credit decision stage, credit contract stage and credit disbursement stage.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reni ◽  
Ratna Widayati

The purpose of this study was to find out how the implementation of giving credit to the Bank Nagari west Sumatra. In analyzing the data, qualitative data analysis was used as a research methods that explained descriptively. The results of the study conclude that in the implementation of lending must go through several prosedures that must be met by customers, namely: credit application, credit analysis, credit approval, credit contract and credit search. arter the signing of the contract, the customer must carry out all agreement, which are binding and cannot be contested


Author(s):  
Le Thi Bich Chi ◽  
Le Minh Bao Trung

Interest rates are a financial tool to ensure the rights of lenders in loan contracts. Accordingly, the borrower is obliged to pay interest if so agreed or provided by law. Through the amendments of the Civil Code, interest rates are an item that has had many changes compared to other provisions in loan agreements. However, the interest rates prescribed in the current Civil Code still cause different interpretations, especially in relation to credit laws. This leads to inconsistent application of the law, especially when dealing with credit contract disputes. Therefore, based on the study of interest rate regulations on loan contracts under the laws of Vietnam over time, we analyze some problems about interest rates and credit law under the current Civil Code and make some specific recommendations to solve the problems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elysabet Sry Devi Bruni Simatupang ◽  
Sunarmi S ◽  
Mahmul Siregar ◽  
Utary Maharany Barus

A bank always requires collateral to its customers in providing credit facility as a form of a guarantee or responsibility for their contract with the bank. A bank also employs an Appraisal Bank or Public Appraisal Service Office (KJPP). KJPP is expected to prevent wrong collateral valuation and value engineering. Therefore, the research problems are how the independence of an Appraisal Bank is, in performing collateral valuation in a credit contract, how the binding force of the valuation results gained by an Appraisal Bank to the collateral in a credit contract, and how the liability of the Appraisal Bank for the valuation performed by an Appraisal Bank to the collateral in a credit contract. This is a normative juridical and descriptive research. This research employs statutory method using primary, secondary, and tertiary legal materials. The data are collected from library study and field observation. They are analyzed by reducing data, presenting data, and drawing conclusions/making verification to obtain descriptive data. The results of the research conclude that the independence an. appraisal is assessed when he performs valuation without intervention from anyone. In legal view, an appraisal is considered valid and affecting the collateral object; the results of his valuation becomes his responsibility. The responsibility of an appraisal for his valuation results can be seen from the conformity of his report and the prevailing regulations. It is suggested that one be required and obliged to have specific skills, integrity, honesty and objectivity to become an appraisal. An appraisal also has to be guided by ethical codes and prevailing laws and regulations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Zohreh Molamohamadi ◽  
Abolfazl Mirzazadeh

In the classical inventory systems, the retailer had to settle the accounts of the purchased items at the time they were received. But in practice, the supplier applies some strategic tools, such as trade credit contract, to enhance his sales channel and offers delay period to his customers to settle the account. Any member of the supply chain may offer full or partial trade credit contract to his downstream level. Full trade credit is the case that the latter is allowed to defer the whole payment to the end of the credit period. In partial trade credit, however, the downstream supply chain member must pay for a proportion of the purchased goods at first and can delay paying for the rest until the end of the credit period. This paper considers a two-level trade credit, where the supplier offers order-quantity-dependent partial trade credit to a retailer, who suggests full trade credit to his customers. An economic order quantity (EOQ) inventory model of a deteriorating item is formulated here, and the Branch and Reduce Optimization Navigator is applied to find the optimal replenishment policy. The sensitivity of the variables on different parameters has been analyzed by applying some numerical examples. The data reveal that increasing the credit periods of the retailer and the customers can decrease and increase the retailer’s total cost, respectively.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-36
Author(s):  
Komang Yustika Dewi Suryaningsih ◽  
A.A.A. Ngr. Tini Rusmini Gorda

Credit agreement in standard form which is being made unilaterally by the bank until present is still becoming a special legal issue in agreement field of civil law. In addition, viewed from the side of the agreement it is also against consumer protection law as set in Consumer Protection Act. Problem formulation of is divided into namely regarding the existence of standard clause in bank agreement if associated with Article 18 of Consumer Protection Act and legal consequence of standard clause in credit agreement associated with consumer protection. This study aims to identify the presence of standard clause in banking agreement if related with Article 18 of Consumer Protection Act and legal consequence to the standard clause in credit contract is associated with consumer protection.  The research is a juridical empirical. The location is on PT. Bank Negara Indonesia in Denpasar city. The author is guided by laws and regulations related with public fact, that is first problem formulation is analyzed from balancing principle and next the second problem formulation is from consumer protection theory. The result shows that the implementation of the provision tends to protect the bank as businesses. Moreover, the legal consequence of Bank BNI’s credit contract which does not meet the provision will result in null and void.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-36
Author(s):  
Komang Yustika Dewi Suryaningsih ◽  
A.A.A. Ngr. Tini Rusmini Gorda

Credit agreement in standard form which is being made unilaterally by the bank until present is still becoming a special legal issue in agreement field of civil law. In addition, viewed from the side of the agreement it is also against consumer protection law as set in Consumer Protection Act. Problem formulation of is divided into namely regarding the existence of standard clause in bank agreement if associated with Article 18 of Consumer Protection Act and legal consequence of standard clause in credit agreement associated with consumer protection. This study aims to identify the presence of standard clause in banking agreement if related with Article 18 of Consumer Protection Act and legal consequence to the standard clause in credit contract is associated with consumer protection.  The research is a juridical empirical. The location is on PT. Bank Negara Indonesia in Denpasar city. The author is guided by laws and regulations related with public fact, that is first problem formulation is analyzed from balancing principle and next the second problem formulation is from consumer protection theory. The result shows that the implementation of the provision tends to protect the bank as businesses. Moreover, the legal consequence of Bank BNI’s credit contract which does not meet the provision will result in null and void.


Author(s):  
A.S. Amelina ◽  
O.V. Davydenko
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 2150001
Author(s):  
Jorge Cruz López ◽  
Alfredo Ibáñez

In a default corridor [Formula: see text] that the stock price can never enter, a deep out-of-the-money American put option replicates a pure credit contract (Carr and Wu, 2011, A Simple Robust Link between American Puts and Credit Protection, Review of Financial Studies 24, 473–505). Assuming discrete (one-period-ahead predictable) cash flows, we show that an endogenous credit-risk model generates, along with the default event, a default corridor at the cash-outflow dates, where [Formula: see text] is given by these outflows (i.e., debt service and negative earnings minus dividends). In this endogenous setting, however, the put replicating the credit contract is not American, but European. Specifically, the crucial assumption that determines an endogenous default corridor at the cash-outflow dates is that equityholders’ deep pockets absorb these outflows; that is, no equityholders’ fresh money, no endogenous corridor.


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