
Contract Provision
A contract provision is a stipulation within a contract, legal document, or a law. One of the most familiar uses of a contract provision is a bond’s call provision, which refers to a specific date; after this date, the company may recall and retire the bond. For example, an anti-greenmail provision is a type of contract provision that is contained in some companies' charters that prevents the board of directors from paying a premium to a corporate raider to drop a hostile takeover bid. In loan documents, a loan loss provision is a type of contract provision that details an expense set aside to allow for uncollected loans or loan payments. A bond's call provision refers to a specific date; after this date, the company may recall and retire the bond.

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What Is a Contract Provision?
A contract provision is a stipulation within a contract, legal document, or a law. A contract provision often requires action by a specific date or within a specified period of time. Contract provisions are intended to protect the interests of one or both parties in a contract.



How a Contract Provision Works
Contract provisions can be found in a country's laws, in loan documents, and in contract agreements. They also can be found in the fine print accompanying purchases of some stocks.
For example, an anti-greenmail provision is a type of contract provision that is contained in some companies' charters that prevents the board of directors from paying a premium to a corporate raider to drop a hostile takeover bid.
In loan documents, a loan loss provision is a type of contract provision that details an expense set aside to allow for uncollected loans or loan payments. This provision is used to cover a number of factors associated with potential loan losses.
Special Considerations
Many laws are written with a sunset provision that automatically repeals them on a specific date unless legislators reenact them. A sunset provision provides for a repeal of the entire law — or sections of the law — once a specific date is reached.
For example, the National Security Agency’s (NSA) authority to collect bulk telephone metadata under the USA PATRIOT Act expired at midnight on June 1, 2015. Any investigations started before the sunset date was allowed to be completed. Many sunsetted portions of the Patriot Act were extended through 2019 with the USA Freedom Act. However, the provision allowing the collection of massive phone data by government agencies was replaced with a new provision that this data must be held by phone providers.
This practice of sunsetting has its parallel in business. For example, a sunset provision in an insurance policy limits a claimant’s time to submit a claim for a covered risk. If the claimant does not act within the defined period, the right to make the claim is forfeited.
Example of a Contract Provision
One of the most familiar uses of a contract provision is a bond’s call provision. A bond's call provision refers to a specific date; after this date, the company may recall and retire the bond. The bond investor can turn it in for payment of the face amount (or the face amount plus a premium).
For example, a 12-year bond issue can be called after five years. That first five-year period has a hard call protection. Investors are guaranteed to earn interest until at least the first call date. When an investor buys a bond, the broker typically provides the yield to call as well as the yield to maturity. These two yields show the bond’s investment potential.
If a bond has a soft call provision, the procedure will go into effect after the hard call provision period passes. Soft call protection is typically a premium to face value that the issuer pays for calling the bond before maturity. For example, after the call date is reached, the issuer might pay a 3% premium for calling the bonds for the next year, a 2% premium the following year, and a 1% premium for calling the bonds more than two years after the hard call expires.
Related terms:
Antitrust
Antitrust laws apply to virtually all industries and to every level of business, including manufacturing, transportation, distribution, and marketing. read more
Broker and Example
A broker is an individual or firm that charges a fee or commission for executing buy and sell orders submitted by an investor. read more
Callable Security
A callable security is a security with an embedded call provision that allows the issuer to repurchase or redeem the security by a specified date. read more
Call Protection
Call protection is a provision in a bond that prohibits the issuer from buying it back during a set period early in its life. read more
Call Provision
A call provision is a provision on a bond or other fixed-income instrument that allows the issuer to repurchase and retire its bonds. read more
Contract Theory
Contract theory is the study of how individuals and businesses construct and develop legal agreements, drawing on economic behavior and social science to understand behaviors. read more
Hard Call Protection
Hard call protection is a provision in a callable bond whereby the issuer cannot exercise the call and redeem the bond before the specified date. read more
Loan
A loan is money, property, or other material goods given to another party in exchange for future repayment of the loan value amount with interest. read more
Preferred Stock
Preferred stock refers to a class of ownership that has a higher claim on assets and earnings than common stock has. read more
Provisional Call Feature
A provisional call feature allows an issuer, usually of convertible securities, to call the issue during a non-call period if a price level is reached. read more