Examples of Offering Funding Shares in a sentence
The term "Offering Value" shall be the quotient obtained by dividing the Offering Funding Amount by the number of Offering Funding Shares sold in such Offering Funding.
The term "Offering Value" shall be the quotient obtained by dividing the Offering Funding Amount by the number of Offering Funding Shares sold in such Offering Funding.
Offering Funding Date means the date on which the offering for the Series Asset is fully funded through an offering conducted by the Company.
Offering Shares means the shares of Common Stock included in the Units issued pursuant to this Agreement and Investor Warrant Shares.
NIM Securities As defined in the tenth Recital to this Agreement.
Individual Securities shall have the meaning specified in Section 3.01(p).
Redemption Shares has the meaning set forth in Section 6.2(a). “Reviewed Year” has the meaning ascribed to said phrase under Section 6225(d)(1) of the Code.
Underlying Funds means open-end investment companies registered under the 1940 Act within the ING fund complex. The term, “fund complex” shall have the same meaning as defined in Item 17 of Form N-1A, as it was in effect on May 7, 2013.
Initial Optional Purchase Date The first Distribution Date following the date on which the Aggregate Loan Balance is less than 10.00% of the Cut-off Date Balance.
Participating Funds means those Funds that are parties to a particular repurchase transaction effected through the Joint Trading Account.
Subsequent Offering means any further issuance of Interests in any Series, excluding any Initial Offering or Transfer.
Participating Fund means each Fund, including, as applicable, any series thereof, specified in Exhibit A, as such Exhibit may be amended from time to time by agreement of the parties hereto, the shares of which are available to serve as the underlying investment medium for the aforesaid Contracts.
Redemption Securities means any debt or equity securities of the Corporation, any Subsidiary or any other corporation or other entity, or any combination thereof, having such terms and conditions as shall be approved by the Board of Directors and which, together with any cash to be paid as part of the redemption price, in the opinion of any nationally recognized investment banking firm selected by the Board of Directors (which may be a firm which provides other investment banking, brokerage or other services to the Corporation), has a value, at the time notice of redemption is given pursuant to paragraph (d) of this Section 5, at least equal to the Fair Market Value of the shares to be redeemed pursuant to this Section 5 (assuming, in the case of Redemption Securities to be publicly traded, such Redemption Securities were fully distributed and subject only to normal trading activity).
Investing Fund any Fund investing Cash Balances and/or Cash Collateral in an Affiliated Money Market Fund; and
Underlying Fund means a collective investment scheme (including exchange traded funds) which will be daily dealing, open-ended and may be listed or unlisted and will be domiciled in, in the case of regulated funds in an EU/EEA Member State authorised under the European Communities (Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities) Regulations, 2011 as amended (the "UCITS Regulations") or authorised under domestic legislation implementing the UCITS Regulations and such other investment funds as may be permitted by the Central Bank as Category 1 from time to time (category 1 investment funds pursuant to the AIF rulebook ("Category 1")), or authorised in an EU Member State (category 2 investment funds pursuant to the AIF rulebook ("Category 2")), Guernsey where authorised as "Class A Schemes" (Category 1) or "Class B Schemes" (Category 2), Jersey where established either as "Recognised Funds" (Category 1) or as funds that are not "Recognised Funds" (Category 2), the Isle of Man as "Authorised Schemes" (Category 1) or "unauthorised schemes" (Category 2), any investment funds authorised by the US Securities and Exchanges Commission under the Investment Companies Act 1940 (Category 2) and such other investment funds as may be permitted by the Central Bank as Category 2 from time to time. The AIFM will confirm to the Central Bank that any new Category 2 investment funds will comply in all material respects with the requirements applicable to a Retail Investor Alternative Investment Fund pursuant to the AIF Rulebook. In the case of unregulated funds, these will be domiciled in Australia, Hong Kong, South Africa, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Singapore or Mauritius and will follow an investment strategy that seeks to provide capital appreciation to its investors through direct investment in transferable securities in the form of cash and/or cash equivalents, global equities (such as shares and common stock) and global equity related securities (securities with equity characteristics or conferring the right to acquire equity securities, such as depositary receipts and preference shares), REITs and global bonds which are listed on Recognised Markets (as set out in Appendix II of the Prospectus). Underlying Funds may not be leveraged. The Underlying Funds must comply with the investment restrictions of the Fund as outlined below.
Qualifying Securities means securities issued by the Issuer that:
Purchaser Securities means the Purchaser Units, the Purchaser Common Stock, the Purchaser Preferred Stock and the Purchaser Warrants, collectively.
Rights Offering Shares means the shares of New Common Stock (including all Unsubscribed Shares purchased by the Commitment Parties pursuant to this Agreement) distributed pursuant to and in accordance with the Rights Offering Procedures.
Optional Purchase Price has the meaning set forth in Section 8.1 of the Sale and Servicing Agreement.
ETP Securities means the Series of ETP Securities to which these Conditions relates or, as the context may require, any or all securities issued by the Issuer under the Programme.
Revolving fund means a self-supporting fund which provides services or sells goods to state agencies, other governmental jurisdictions, or the public.
Offered Securities shall have the meaning specified in Section 5.03(b)(ii)(B).
Series B Securities means the 11-1/2% Senior Notes due 2007, Series B, of the Company to be issued pursuant to this Indenture in exchange for the Series A Securities pursuant to the Registered Exchange Offer and the Registration Rights Agreement.
Over-allotment Purchase Price The Purchaser shall pay the Over-allotment Purchase Price by wire transfer of immediately available funds to the Company at least one business day prior to the Over-Allotment Closing Date in accordance with the Company’s wiring instructions. On the Over-allotment Closing Date, upon the payment by the Purchaser of the Over-allotment Purchase Price, the Company shall, at its option, deliver a certificate evidencing the Private Placement Warrants purchased by the Purchaser on such date duly registered in the Purchaser’s name to the Purchaser, or effect such delivery in book-entry form.
Contract Securities means the Offered Securities, if any, to be purchased pursuant to the delayed delivery contracts referred to below.
Sinking Fund means each Sinking Fund Subaccount under the Indenture. To the extent necessary for compliance with the Authority’s tax covenants and other provisions of the Indenture and the Act, the Authorized Officers of the Authority may subdivide each such subaccount in respect of separate categories or issues of Sinking Fund Bonds.
Original Securities means all Securities other than Exchange Securities.
Firm Securities means the number or amount of Securities that the several Underwriters are initially committed to purchase under the Underwriting Agreement (which may be expressed as a percentage of an aggregate number or amount of Securities to be purchased by the Underwriters, as in the case of a standby Underwriting Agreement). “Additional Securities” means the Securities, if any, that the several Underwriters have an option to purchase under the Underwriting Agreement to cover over-allotments. The number, amount, or percentage of Firm Securities set forth opposite each Underwriter’s name in the Underwriting Agreement plus any additional Firm Securities which such Underwriter has made a commitment to purchase, irrespective of whether such Underwriter actually purchases or sells such number, amount, or percentage of Securities under the Underwriting Agreement or Article XI hereof, is hereinafter referred to as the “Original Underwriting Obligation” of such Underwriter, and the ratio which such Original Underwriting Obligation bears to the total of all Firm Securities set forth in the Underwriting Agreement (or, in the case of a standby Underwriting Agreement, to 100%) is hereinafter referred to as the “Underwriting Percentage” of such Underwriter. For the avoidance of doubt, each Underwriter acknowledges and agrees that, for all purposes under this Agreement and otherwise (including, to the extent applicable, for purposes of Section 11(e) under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933 (the “1933 Act”)), each Underwriter’s Underwriting Percentage of the total number, amount, or percentage of Securities offered and sold in the Offering (including any Additional Securities), and only such number, amount, or percentage, constitutes the securities underwritten by such Underwriter and distributed to investors.1 References herein to laws, statutory and regulatory sections, rules, regulations, forms, and interpretive materials will be deemed to include any successor provisions.