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The term clawback or claw back refers to any money or benefits that have been given out, but are required to be returned (clawed back) due to special circumstances or events, such as the monies having been received as the result of a financial crime, or where there is a clawback provision in the executive compensation contract.
When liquidating the fund, if the LPs were distributed less than the agreed preferred return, they claw back the missing amount from the carried interest distributed to the GP. [5] [6] The clawback clause is triggered at the very end of the fund, at a time where the General Partner may have already put the clawback amount to other use.
Overage or land-sale overage (also called “claw back”) is a term in land sales used to describe a sum of money in addition to the original sale price which a seller of land may be entitled to receive following completion if and when the buyer complies with agreed conditions.
This fee can range between 1% and 8%, a gut-wrenching amount you must claw back over the annuity's life, and you lose this money almost immediately as you have to pay the commission upfront ...
The pandemic hit many Americans right where it hurts -- in their wallets. "Hitting rock bottom financially is something many people fear -- and understandably so," said Kate S. Mielitz, Ph.D., AFC ...
Deferring realisation of the reward for one or more years gives the Board more ability to re-capture the reward in such circumstances. Technically recapturing deferred STI before it vests is a "malus" rather than a clawback. As an alternative to simple vested restricted stock, companies have been adding performance type features to their grants ...
SAVE changed the formula used to calculate payments by basing them on a smaller portion of your adjusted gross income. It introduced an interest subsidy so your balance didn't grow if your ...
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