Financing Options Clause Samples
The Financing Options clause outlines the various methods by which a party may fund its obligations or purchases under an agreement. It typically details acceptable forms of payment, such as loans, installment plans, or third-party financing, and may specify any conditions or approvals required for each option. This clause provides flexibility for the buyer or obligor, ensuring that financial arrangements can be tailored to their needs while clarifying the terms and limitations of each financing method, thereby reducing misunderstandings and facilitating smoother transactions.
Financing Options. (Delete two of the following ¶¶
1.20.1 Purchaser may apply for financing in connection with this sale and Purchaser's obligation to purchase under this Contract is contingent upon issuance of a Loan Commitment Letter by the Loan Commitment Date (¶18.1.2).
1.20.2 Purchaser may apply for financing in connection with this sale but Purchaser's obligation to purchase under this Contract is not contingent upon issuance of a Loan Commitment letter.
1.20.3 Purchaser shall not apply for financing in connection with this sale.
Financing Options. Students may apply for financing via the student portal. Students may apply for financing at any point throughout the course, and they may choose to finance up to 50% of their overall balance. Students may select terms in 12, 18, or 24 months at a rate of 18%. Should students withdraw from the course, the published refund policy would apply. Payments are due according to the terms of the retail installment contract even if the borrower does not complete his or her education, cannot get a job after completion of the program, or is dissatisfied with the education.
Financing Options. (Delete two of the following ¶¶1.20.1,
Financing Options. 1. The Supporter wishes to provide to Tomorrow, before, at or after his death, a sum of a. EUR XXX,000.00 (in words XXX) for the performance of cryopreservation in accordance with the Support and Research Agreement. This sum shall be used in accordance with the Support and Research Agreement.
Financing Options. We also offer financing options via Care Credit with no interest payments up to 12 months on approved credit.
Financing Options. For purposes of this Agreement, the term “Lender” shall mean any financial institution or entity (or parent, subsidiary, or affiliate thereof) with whom UNC has a contractual relationship under the Program that offers, or has at any time in the past, offered financing to any Clients who have submitted applications for credit under the Program. The term “Buyer” shall mean any person who purchases from Merchant any financing contract Merchant enters into with Client (“Merchant RIS Contract”). The term “Financing Agreement” shall mean either Loan Agreement signed by client with Lender or a Merchant RIS Contract signed with Merchant.
Financing Options. Step 1: Analytical Tools Diagnostic Tool for Assessing SDI Readiness Albania Colombia Croatia Honduras Indonesia Kosovo Malaysia Moldova Palestine Scotland Serbia Sierra Leone Zambia Guyana- upcoming Seychelles- upcoming Self-Assessment and Remote Diagnostic Completion: Sierra Leone Cross Regional Knowledge Sharing: with Serbia SERBIA SIERRA LEONE Step 2: Technical Assistance Country Level Action and Investment Plans Step 3: Financing Valuing Geospatial Information 15,000 -5,000 -10,000 Base Case: RoI: 2.5 : 1 (conservative) BUILDING SMART CITIES CLIMATE-SMART AGRICULTURE 11 Step 1: Baseline Assessment Step 2: Impact Assessment and Action Plan Step3: Investment and Implementation Data Policy 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Governance Use of NSDI Legal Capacity Development Accessibility and Technical Socio-economic Analysis Alignment of Interventions to Business Drivers: Tirana 2030 plan 15 Objective Facilitated by: Socio-economic Impact Assessment 16 Action Plan: Priority Interventions and Investments 17 Total Investment: € 15.5 Action Plan: Priority Interventions and Investments Return on Investment (RoI) Provisional benefit to cost ratio:
3:1 Significant costs of Inaction
Financing Options. Provisions regarding the more uncommon financing circumstances, such as loan assumption or carryback financing are addressed as checkboxes in Section 8 of the Purchase Agreement. However, the terms for those circumstances are now to be addressed by separate addendum. This provides the parties all of the same options but relegate the specific terms to a required addendum. S ALE OF EXISTING HOME CONTINGENCY Section 9 of the Purchase Agreement provides significant detail for the circumstances under which a Purchaser may make an offer contingent upon the listing or sale of existing home. This is an extremely common contingency, such that it made sense to list the terms and requirements in the Agreement. The language of Section 9 either includes the information regarding the scheduled closing or the requirement that the Purchaser’s existing property be listed. The sale of an existing home, like title and financing issues allows for the automatic extension of the closing date under the terms of Section 13 of the Agreement. The Purchase Agreement includes language that would apply to the sale of rental and investment properties in Section 22. Specifically, Section 22 provides that deposits and leases are assigned at closing if the property is leased. The Seller is also required to provide copies of all leases within three days of acceptance of the Purchase Agreement. Section 22 provides that the parties will cooperate if one or both wish to pectinate in a 1031 tax deferred, like kind exchange. Property inspections, addressed in Section 18 of the Agreement provides a simplified structure. Rather than requiring a purchaser to identify the specific inspections to be performed, or requiring the inspections to be ordered within a certain number of days, the purchaser now has a 14-day period in which to arrange for an obtain the results of any property inspections desired. Before the end of the 14 days, the seller must be informed of the deficient conditions or the inspection contingency is deemed waived. If conditions are identified by the Purchasers, the Purchaser and Seller can negotiate an Addendum regarding these matters up through the 18th day following the acceptance of the Purchase Agreement. If the parties do not reach an agreement by that time, the Purchase Agreement terminates and the deposit is refunded to the Purchaser. Although the language used with respect to inspections is similar to the language which has been used in the Lincoln market for some time,...
Financing Options. Contractor shall work with Town staff to identify viable options for financing the recommended fiber network. Task 8: Business Plan/Pro Forma Financial Analysis Contractor shall analyze the financial feasibility of deploying a broadband network in the Town and deliver a 15 year pro forma forecast. As part of the greater financial analysis, Contractor shall complete an analysis of the various business structure options available to the Town for providing broadband services by exploring the strategic, financial, and organizational implications of each. Contractor shall evaluate the potential business structure options with Town staff to make sure all appropriate options are being considered and then go about evaluating the alternatives from both qualitative and quantitative points of view. This deliverable will include all applicable capital costs, operating expenses, and revenues to operate an FTTP system as either a wholesaler or retailer. The following specific line-items will be included: • Capital investment required (amount, timeframe, responsible party, etc.) • Additional assets required (alignment with asset inventory) • Potential services and partners (aligned with assessment and identifying strategic impact and cash flows) • Operations & maintenance (amount, timeframe, responsible party, etc.) • Repair • Customer service • Installation • Marketing • SG&A (personnel, professional services, supplies, etc.) • Financials (Net Income, Balance Sheet & Cash Flow) over 15 years Contractor shall use its financial models to evaluate in detail the financial feasibility and outcomes for the business models being evaluated. Accordingly, the feasibility analysis methodology will allow creation of a market-driven demand-planning tool that is flexible and allows for mutations of the various strategies depending on certain variables, including different business structure models, rather than a detailed business plan of a single option. For those models which involve a private operator, Contractor shall evaluate the viable wholesale price points that would need to be charged by the Town to sustain financial feasibility. Revenue Forecast Contractor shall create a revenue forecast based upon the retail or wholesale service that would be offered. The business case will include penetration and pricing input as derived from the market research for each business model being considered by the Town. The revenue forecast will account for each business structure option being ...
Financing Options. 1. Representatives shall describe the terms of any available financing offered through each Party’s respective lending partners in terms that are truthful, clear and complete. Representatives should not make any statements that are false or misleading and should not withhold information. Examples of misconduct in this regard include:
a) Stating or suggesting that a Customer should not apply for financing or will not be approved should they apply;
b) Mentioning the monthly payment amount without also disclosing the number of months in the term of the loan;
c) Only using the term “interest rate” rather than “Annual Percentage Rate” or APR;
d) Stating or suggesting that the Retail Installment Contract does not need to be repaid;
e) Failing to disclose accurately the identity of the lender;
f) Making false statements regarding your personal experiences with, or opinions about, the lender, the loan terms, or other persons (such as other employees or Customers);
g) Failing to disclose that important terms and conditions apply to the loan, and that the Customer should be careful to read all relevant disclosures, including:
(1) the eConsent disclosure, which is the Customer’s authorization to conduct the transaction electronically;
(2) the Truth In Lending disclosure, which explains important financial terms of the loan; Confidential Sales Dealer Agreement (Vivint Solar Developer, LLC – Vivint, Inc.)
(3) any applicable Promissory Note, which contains the legal terms of the loan; and
(4) any applicable Privacy Notice, which explains the lender’s privacy practices in connection with its customers; and
h) Making any false or misleading comparison to any other available loan or financing option.
2. Prior to allowing a Prospective Customer to apply for financing, Representatives must request that such Person provide a valid government-issued photo identification (i.e., driver’s license, passport, military Id etc.). The Representative must then verify the following:
a) The photographed person on the form of identification is that of the individual present and completing the application for financing;
b) The name on the applicable form of identification matches the name on the application for financing;
c) The address on the form of identification matches the address provided on the application for financing;
d) The date of birth on the form of identification matches the date of birth provided on the application for financing;
e) The form of identification has not expire...