Assignment Of Proceeds

  

You loaned money to a friend, and now he's paying you back in installments. Meanwhile, you recently bought a different friend's sous vide machine (because you really want to get into high-end cooking, and he bought it two years ago, used it once and now it just sits in his basement).
Instead of getting cash from your money-borrowing friend and giving it to your fancy-cooking friend, you decide to skip the middle man. You tell Friend A to just give the money he owes you to Friend B.
That's essentially assignment of proceeds.
In general terms, this type of transaction happens when one party transfers the funds generated from a letter of credit to a third party. Basically, a company is owned money, but strikes a side deal for someone else to become the beneficiary of any funds generated from that debt.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a Beneficiary?25 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop.. what is a beneficiary? well in Latin, bene is

00:08

good so this is like a good place to catch fish...well close not [Old man fishing in the ocean]

00:15

really but being a beneficiary is good it means you get stuff like if you are

00:20

the beneficiary of weird uncle Al's will then you get his odd collection of hair

00:26

balls shaped like US presidents and thirty two thousand two hundred sixty [Uncle Al's will appears]

00:31

$9.32... in essence then you are the beneficiary of his will you are the one

00:37

set up to benefit by the death of someone who wanted to favor you with

00:42

their assets when they had you know passed on to the great beyond where hair [Uncle Al with white wings in heaven]

00:46

balls will fall....

Up Next

Finance: What are Accounts Payable and Accounts Receivable?
111 Views

What are accounts receivable and accounts payable? Accounts receivable and payable are figures that show up on a company’s balance sheet. Account...

Finance: What is a Line of Credit?
133 Views

What is a line of credit? A line of credit is kind of like a loan. A bank gives a borrower a line of credit, which basically says they can borrow â...

Finance: What's the Difference Between Short-term and Long-term Liabilities?
35 Views

What is the difference between short-term and long-term liabilities? Short-term liabilities show up on the balance sheet. They need to be paid in t...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)