loanback

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See also: loan-back

English

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Etymology

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From loanback.

Noun

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loanback (countable and uncountable, plural loanbacks)

  1. A loan made from a pension or annuity to someone who has contributed money to that pension or annuity.
    • 1982, Norman Toulson, Modern Pensions, page 134:
      For example, a unit-linked office may require the borrower to have part at least of his personal pension premiums invested in units in a special fund from which the office makes loans to loanback borrowers.
    • 1987, Accountancy - Volume 99, page 13:
      Furthermore, the Target plans provide a guaranteed loanback facility with loans from as little as £5,001.
    • 2014, Sara Williams, The Financial Times Guide to Business Start Up 2015, →ISBN:
      Most of the plans have loanback facilities, which allow you to use your pension to get a loan.
  2. A loan from a trust fund to the grantor that created the fund.
    • 1983, Malcolm A. Moore, Use of Trusts in Estate Planning, page 434:
      A prearranged loanback of the entire gift property itself (rather than just the income therefrom) may well be disregarded as being merely a grantor retained control over the property, thereby causing the entire amount of the "loan" to be included in the grantor's estate.
    • 1984, Resource Materials: Estate Planning in Depth - Volume 2, page 583:
      The following, in combination, may avert an implication of prior agreement: (a). Use of an independent trustee; (b). Reasonable time between creation of trust and loanback.
    • 1990, Richard A. Westin, Federal Tax Planning, page 23:
      A more modest approach is for the parent to give money to a child, followed by a loanback to the parent.