Preferred Creditor

  

Categories: Credit

Your parents. A kindly uncle. A chipper, generous banker with terrible organizational skills and an impaired memory, who might just forget they gave you any money. Those would be our preferred creditors.

But this term doesn't refer to the people we most want loaning us money. It represents the people who get paid back first, especially if things go south.

A preferred creditor gets the first place in line in the case of a bankruptcy. The distinction gives the creditor dibs on any cash recovered from a liquidation. The title doesn’t just go to particular lenders. Sometimes, the legal system designates some organizations as top of the collection food chain; for instance, tax authorities often get first shot.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are Junior and Senior Debt...7 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop what are senior and junior debt? or like what's the

00:07

difference between them well what are they they're debt in a bankruptcy senior

00:13

debt collects what they're owed ahead of junior debt shockingly yep laws of the [Debt transferring to senior debt]

00:18

jungle remember the debt stack? vendors to the

00:21

company collect first then employees then the IRS of course because while

00:26

they always have their hands up in your bidness [Woman flips over stack of papers on womans desk]

00:29

then come senior bonds then come junior then come unsecured bonds also known as

00:35

debentures then subordinated debenture like debentures below debentures and

00:39

there are all kinds of granular things in the bonds above we're very sorry if

00:43

one day in your career you have to care about all of this okay then moving down [Man discussing debt stack]

00:47

the stack then there's preferred stock which collects after the most

00:52

subordinated debentures collect generally and then finally there's

00:56

common stock and well really finally then there's death and well in taxes [Uncle Sam appears at grave stone]

Up Next

Finance: What are Secured Bonds v Unsecured Bonds, and what is Non-Recourse Debt: Debentures (Subordinated and Senior)?
68 Views

When a bond is secured, it means it's protected, i.e. there are assets that would be forfeited if repayment is not made. When it's unsecured... it'...

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