Finance:Amortization

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Short description: Paying off an account over a period with small payments


Amortization (or amortisation; see spelling differences) is paying off an owed amount over time by making planned, incremental payments of principal and interest. To amortize a loan means "to kill it off".[1] In accounting, amortization refers to charging or writing off an intangible asset's cost as an operational expense over its estimated useful life to reduce a company's taxable income.[2][1]

Etymology

The word comes from Middle English amortisen to kill, alienate in mortmain, from Anglo-French amorteser, alteration of amortir, from Vulgar Latin admortire "to kill", from Latin ad- and mort-, "death".

Applications of amortization

  • When used in the context of a home purchase, amortization is the process by which loan principal decreases over the life of a loan, typically an amortizing loan. As each mortgage payment is made, part of the payment is applied as interest on the loan, and the remainder of the payment is applied towards reducing the principal. An amortization schedule, a table detailing each periodic payment on a loan, shows the amounts of principal and interest and demonstrates how a loan's principal amount decreases over time. An amortization schedule can be generated by an amortization calculator. Negative amortization is an amortization schedule where the loan amount actually increases through not paying the full interest.
  • In business, amortization allocates a lump sum amount to different time periods, particularly for loans and other forms of finance, including related interest or other finance charges. Amortization is also applied to capital expenditures of certain assets under accounting rules, particularly intangible assets, in a manner analogous to depreciation.
  • In tax law in the United States, amortization refers to the cost recovery system for intangible property.
  • In computer science, amortized analysis is a method of analyzing the execution cost of algorithms over a sequence of operations.[3]
  • In the context of zoning regulations, amortization refers to the time period a non-conforming property has to conform to a new zoning classification before the non-conforming use becomes prohibited. For example, if the city rezones property from industrial to residential and sets an amortization period of one year, all property within the rezoned boundary must move from industrial use to residential use within one year.
  • In the context of Securitization the Joshua Curve relates to a unique amortization profile that results in the innovative "horseshoe Shape" or "J Shape" weighted average life ("WAL") distribution. In other words, if the base case results in a WAL of 10.0 years, the stress case and performance case would both result in reduced WALs that are both less than 10.0 years due to accelerated amortization.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "amortize". https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/amortize. 
  2. "amortization". http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/amortization.html. 
  3. Cormen, Thomas H.; Leiserson, Charles E.; Rivest, Ronald L.; Stein, Clifford (July 2009). "Chapter 17". Introduction to Algorithms (Third ed.). MIT Press and McGraw-Hill. https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/introduction-algorithms-third-edition. 

External links