Floor Plan
Categories: Retirement and Pension,
Hybrid employee benefit plan combining certain aspects of both defined-benefit and defined-contribution plans. Its objective is to ensure that retiring employees receive a certain minimum ('the floor') of the benefits irrespective of the losses that may occur in the defined-contribution plans, and that they benefit from investment gains accrued under the defined benefit plans. In this arrangement, the employer maintains two plans: a defined-contribution plan (any plan other than a section 401(k) cash or deferred plan) that serves as the primary fund for the retirement benefits, and a defined-benefit plan that uses a benefit-formula to establish the floor benefits. If the defined-contribution benefits fall below the floor, the defined-benefit plan makes up the shortfall. This scheme also allows an employer to offer early retirement benefits not permissible under a defined-contribution plan. also called floor-offset plan.
Featured term of the day
Definition / Meaning of
Inflation-adjusted Principal
Categories: Bonds and Treasuries,
The net worth of a principal amount used to buy inflation-adjusted securities, taking into account any inflation that takes place till the maturity date. The new value of the principal is derived by multiplying the original principal amount by the inflation index ratio.P(adj) = P(ori) x ( CPI(cur) / CPI(ref) )Where, P(adj) = the net worth of the principal value after inflation adjustment; P(ori) = the original amount of principal used to buy the security ; CPI(ref) = the inflation level at the time the bond is first issued (usually taken from 3 months before the bond is issued) ; CPI(cur) = the inflation level at the current period of the bond maturityFor example, an investor buys a $2,000 Treasury inflation-adjusted bond in June. The CPI reference rate is taken from March's CPI (three months earlier), which is, for example, 100. Six months later, inflation has risen 1% and the current CPI is now 101. This will yield an inflation index ratio of 101/100, or 1.01. At the end of six months, the bond's adjusted principal is now worth $2,020, or 2,000 x 1.01.
Most popular terms
1. Severance Pay2. MCS-90 Endorsement
3. Sell Short
4. Savings Bonds
5. No-load Mutual Fund
6. Opt-out Lawsuits
7. Principal Register
8. Storm Surge
9. Employee Retirement Income Security Act Stock Drop Litigation
10. Separate Account Fund
Search a term
Browse by alphabet
A | B | C | D | E | F | G |
H | I | J | K | L | M | N |
O | P | Q | R | S | T | U |
V | W | X | Y | Z | # |
Browse by category
AccountingBanking
Bankruptcy Assistance
Bonds and Treasuries
Brokerages
Business and Management
Compliance and Governance
Credit and Debt
E-commerce
Economics
Estate Planning
Forex
Fraud
Fundamental Analysis
Futures
Global
Insurance
International Trade
Investing and Trading
Ipos
Legal
Loan and Mortgage
Mergers and Acquisitions
Mutual Funds
Operation and Production
Options
Patent
Personnel Management
Real Estate
Retirement and Pension
Statistics and Risk Management
Stocks
Strategies
Tax
Technical Analysis
Venture Capital