
Due Bill Period
In the context of corporate actions, such as the issuance of dividends, due bill period is the time during which due bills are used. Due bills function as promissory notes and ensure that the correct owner receives a stock's dividend when the stock trades near its ex-dividend date (ex-date). For certificates of deposit (CDs) and commercial paper, the transaction settles on the same day; for U.S. Treasuries, it is the next day (T+1), while foreign exchange or forex transactions settle in two days (T+2). Clearing brokers are exchange members, who help ensure that trades settle appropriately and transactions are successful. A due bill documents and clarifies a stock seller's obligation to deliver a pending dividend or another form of payment to the stock's buyer. This period often extends from one day after the record date to one day after the ex-date, when payment is due.
What Is Due Bill Period?
In the context of corporate actions, such as the issuance of dividends, due bill period is the time during which due bills are used.
A due bill documents and clarifies a stock seller's obligation to deliver a pending dividend or another form of payment to the stock's buyer. Due bills are also used in other types of events, such as the issuance of rights and warrants, and stock splits.
Understanding Due Bill Period
Due bills function as promissory notes and ensure that the correct owner receives a stock's dividend when the stock trades near its ex-dividend date (ex-date). They are helpful during this interim period when trades are still settling. This period often extends from one day after the record date to one day after the ex-date, when payment is due.
In the past, security transactions were done manually rather than electronically. Investors would have to wait for the delivery of a physical security (in certificate form) and would not pay until the reception. Since delivery times could vary and prices could fluctuate, market regulators required parties to deliver the securities and cash in a set period of time. Settlements are far more streamlined today, with the due bill period helping clarify the process.
For certificates of deposit (CDs) and commercial paper, the transaction settles on the same day; for U.S. Treasuries, it is the next day (T+1), while foreign exchange or forex transactions settle in two days (T+2).
Clearing brokers are exchange members, who help ensure that trades settle appropriately and transactions are successful. Clearing brokers are also responsible for maintaining paperwork associated with the clearing and executing of a transaction.
New Canadian Initiative for the Due Bill Period
In 2017, the Canadian securities industry embarked on a new initiative, called "due bill" tracking, to improve tracking in client accounts for major corporate events like stock-splits or spin-offs. The goal of the initiative was to standardize this practice across Canada and U.S. and improve valuation reporting.
Canada hopes that better due bill processing will result in more accurate and timely reporting and eliminate errors that occur from a manual process. For inter-listed securities between Canada and the U.S., Canada hopes the new process will avoid confusion.
The industry will typically use due bills when a security announces a distribution representing 25% or more of the value of its listing. Ordinary dividends will not likely have due bills attached, and their ex-dates will continue to be two days prior to the record date.
Related terms:
Accounting
Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more
Canadian Depository for Securities Limited (CDS)
The Canadian Depository for Securities Limited, known by its acronym CDS, is Canada's national securities depository, clearing and settlement hub. read more
Certificate of Deposit (CD)
A certificate of deposit (CD) is a bank product that earns interest on a lump-sum deposit that's untouched for a predetermined period of time. read more
Clearing Broker
A clearing broker is a member of an exchange that acts as a liaison between an investor and a clearing corporation. read more
Corporate Action
A corporate action is any event, usually approved by the firm's board of directors, that brings material change to a company and affects its stakeholders. read more
CREST
CREST is the central securities depository for markets in the United Kingdom and for Irish stocks. read more
Dividend
A dividend is the distribution of some of a company's earnings to a class of its shareholders, as determined by the company's board of directors. read more
Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC)
Established in 1999, the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC) is a holding company that consists of five clearing corporations and one depository. read more
Due Bill
A due bill is a promissory note that states that a stock seller must deliver an upcoming dividend payment to the stock's buyer. read more
Ex-Dividend : Examples & Key Dates
Ex-dividend is a classification in stock trading that indicates when a declared dividend belongs to the seller rather than the buyer. read more