Face Value. Each Value Management Award Unit shall have a face value of $100.
Face Value. The Series E CCPS shall have a face value of INR 10 (Indian Rupees Ten).
Face Value. The face value of the insurance for full-time faculty members, up to age 70, subject to terms and conditions imposed by the carrier, shall be fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) with an Accidental Death and Dismemberment Rider attached. Faculty members employed at least half-time shall have a policy with a value of twenty-six thousand dollars ($26,000). Faculty members employed less than half-time shall have a policy with a face value of sixteen thousand five hundred dollars ($16,500).
Face Value. The Series H CCPS shall have a face value of INR 10 (Rupees Ten).
Face Value. The redeemable preference shares issued shall have a face value of Rs. 10 (Rupees Ten Only) per Redeemable Preference Share.
Face Value. Borrower Facility Amount Funding Period
Face Value the amounts that form part of and demonstrate the Face Value of each Eligible Receivable have been properly indicated by the Assignor on the basis of the following with regard to the Receivables:
(i) the economic remuneration and payments of the Assignor associated with the production and marketing of the Products as well as all the related costs and expenses of the Assigned Debtor;
(ii) the actual VAT, excise duties, other Taxes and tax rates, if any, that apply in relation to each Receivable and Commercial Agreement (and in any case without any deduction or withholding tax);
(iii) the amount of any other costs, fees, tariffs, levies, Taxes or expenses, specified in the Commercial Agreement payable by the Assigned Debtor also where subsequent to its specific requests in relation to the Products.
Face Value. The CCPS shall have a face value of Rs. 100/- (Indian Rupees One Hundred only) per CCPS.
Face Value. The face value of a life insurance policy is the death benefit the policy will pay. If you take out a $100,000 life insurance policy, $100,000 is the face value. That value can change over time as you borrow from the policy or increase the amount of coverage you have. Face value is not the same as cash value, which is the excess premiums you’ve paid plus interest earned, which accumulates in the policy’s cash value account. A cash value account is the part of a permanent life insurance policy that accrues value over time. With some policies, this is like a savings account, earning a fixed amount of interest. With others, the account functions more like an investment account, allowing the policyholder to make decisions on how the money is invested. The cash value account is funded through your premium payments. After administrative and insurance costs are taken out of your premium, the rest is put into the cash value account. When you’re younger, more of your total premium will go into the account since you’re cheaper to insure. Term life insurance products don’t have cash value accounts. The surrender value of your life insurance policy is the value the insurer will pay you at any given time for the policy. It is not the same as the face value or death benefit of the policy, except under very rare circumstances. Term life policies have no surrender value. Permanent life insurance policies have a surrender value equal to some chunk of the policy’s cash value account. This is usually the total cash value minus any loans and fees. Policies generally have a period of time (sometimes up to 20 years) when a policyholder will be charged a surrender fee for cashing in his or her policy.
Face Value. The face value of each Debt Security is Rs. 10,00,000/- (Rupees Ten Lakhs only).