Residual Interest
Categories: Incorporation, Investing
Your credit card company sends out your bill on March 1. You receive it on March 4, and it has a due date of March 25. It has an outstanding balance of $1,000, and your interest rate is 1.5% per month. You write a check on March 25 and drop it in the mail. It takes two days to get to the credit card company, and then probably another three days to process the check. The payment finally clears on March 30.
So, all told, the credit card statement was originally mailed on March 1 and the payment was officially received on March 30. In the meantime, a month's worth of interest had accrued. At 1.5% on a $1,000 balance, that equates to $15.
While the check you wrote for a $1,000 covered what the company said you owed, by the time everything crossed in the mail, the amount you owed went up by $15.
That little bit of interest (the amount accumulated interest during the interim between the statement getting sent out and the check getting cashed) represents residual interest. For credit cards, this situation can only come up when you carry a balance on your card (the grace period prevents it from happening when you pay your entire balance month to month).
Residual interest can come up with any interest-bearing account. It's any amount that accrues between statements. It's the little bit that adds up as the paperwork flies around.
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Finance: What is a Residual Claim To Ass...2 Views
Finance a la shmoop what is a residual claim to assets? alright people here's an
investment and here's an investment gone bad well here's the result and you have [Cash burning]
a claim to the crumbs of dollar bills here the investment in hair for days.com
didn't go so well instead of regrowing hair as it promised
it actually made hair disappear in you know other places so the investors eight
million bucks is mostly gone Microsoft is buying the company for a
scrap price of five million since you were the preferred stock investor and
there was no debt junior or senior or otherwise no IRS bills owed no vendor
bills owed just the preferred IEU well you have this residual claim to the you know
financial residue and the eight million bucks you invested went to Jenny Craig [Man with briefcase of 8 million dollars appears]
dieted down to only five million bucks which now come your way via your
residual claim to assets fingers crossed your next investment goes a bit better
but hopefully this one will put a little hair on your chest it happens [Man with hairy chest appears]