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Difference Between Loan Tenor And Maturity

Last updated on August 5th, 2023 at 09:48 pm

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What is Tenor?

Tenor means the length of time remaining before a financial contract expires. It is usually used in relation to bank loans, insurance contracts, and derivative products.

Some use it interchangeably with the term maturity, but they have a clear distinction.

For example, a loan is taken out with a three-year tenor. After two-year passes, the tenor of the loan is one year.

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What is maturity?

From a contract point of view, tenor and maturity have distinct meanings. Maturity refers to the initial length of the agreement upon its inception.

For instance, if a 2-year SME loan was obtained two years ago, the maturity would be 2 years while the tenor would be the time remaining until the end of the contract.

If a year is gone, then it means the tenor is one year (the remaining year).

Maturity remains constant, the tenor is not.

While tenor is mostly used in relation to bank loans and insurance contracts, and derivative products, the term maturity is commonly used in relation to corporate and government bonds.

Author

  • Opeyemi Quadri

    Ope is a finance writer and researcher with 10+ years of experience in content creation. His interests cut across decentralized finance, investment, foreign exchange, government policies and politics.

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