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An Escrow account is used to facilitate buying and selling operations, to reduce the performance risk for both parties involved, and guarantee the implementation of contractual financial responsibities between the parties. Escrow accounts may be opened by Corporate Entities as well as by individuals. In order to open the Escrow account, we will prepare a three parties agreement which should be signed between the buyer, the Seller and Capital Merchant Bank. In accordance with the signed agreement the Escrow account is opened, the Buyer transfers the amount of funds mentioned in the agreement as well as the payment for opening of the Escrow account in accordance with CMB's service rates. Both the Buyer and the Seller are protected under Escrow Agreement because: The Seller by delivering the goods or services defined in the contract will receive from the buyer the agreed sum of money which has previously been deposited and reserved to fulfill the payament. The Buyer will make the payments to the Seller only after the Seller has delivered the goods or services agreed to in the contract as verified by the bank according to documentary evidence described in the contract. The intermediation fees of the bank vary according to the complexity and size of the trasactions.
An Escrow Account refers to assets or revenue streams held in safe custody as safety against a contingent situation of non-fulfillment of a contract. In simpler words we may say that an escrow a/c is a third party arrangement to ensure performance of certain obligations between certain parties and operated in terms of an underlying agreement. The account will be a current a/c without cheque drawing facility or a Fixed Deposit account, as defined in the terms of the agreement. Escrow a/c's are typically used for lending arrangements, project financing, Securitisations, M&A's, Buy-back of shares, take-overs, custody, litigations, purchase & sale of land, Source code (used in software) custody, etc. The following reasons enumerate why Escrow accounts are opened:
Provides greater security & comfort Trapping of identified cash flows Regulatory requirements Custody of cash / documents Ease of monitoring The funds in the Escrow a/c are held for the benefit of the Beneficiary of the a/c rather than person / company in whose name the a/c is opened. For e.g.. in a borrower lender arrangement, the a/c name is "Borrower - Escrow a/c" and the funds deposited are that of the borrower but the funds are held in the escrow a/c for the benefit of the Lender. Often terms Trust and Retention and Escrow a/c's are used interchangeably to denote an escrow arrangement. This is not CORRECT. There is a fine line of distinction between each of them. In a Trust and Retention arrangement ICICI Bank Ltd. is appointed as a Trustee while in an Escrow Arrangement ICICI Bank Ltd. acts merely as an agent.
In addition to what you quoted for Escrow Account, I would like add that even when any organization comes out with an IPO, and the offer gets over subscribed, the over subscription money is transferred to the escrow account which needs to be returned to the applicant(s).
Escrow
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
an arrangement where an independent trusted third-party receives and disburses money and/or documents for two or more transacting parties, with the timing of such disbursement by the third-party dependent on the performance by the parties of agreedupon contractual provisions, or an account established by a broker, under the provisions of license law, for the purpose of holding funds on behalf of the broker's principal or some other person until the consummation or termination of a transaction;[1] or, a trust account held in the borrower's name to pay obligations such as property taxes and insurance premiums.
The word derives from the Old French word escroue, meaning a scrap of paper or a roll of parchment; this indicated the deed that a third party held until a transaction was completed.[2]
Contents
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1 Types o 1.1 Internet escrow o 1.2 Banking o 1.3 Law o 1.4 Real estate 2 Licensed escrow companies 3 Legal implications 4 See also 5 References 6 External links
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6.1 Samples
[edit] Types
Escrow generally refers to money held by a third-party on behalf of transacting parties. It is best known in the United States in the context of real estate (specifically in mortgages where the mortgage company establishes an escrow account to pay property tax and insurance during the
term of the mortgage).[3] Escrow is an account separate from the mortgage account where deposit of funds occurs for payment of certain conditions that apply to the mortgage, usually property taxes and insurance. The escrow agent has the duty to properly account for the escrow funds and ensure that usage of funds is explicitly for the purpose intended. Since a mortgage lender is not willing to take the risk that a homeowner will not pay property tax, escrow is usually required under the mortgage terms. Escrow companies are also commonly used in the transfer of high value personal and business property, like websites and businesses, and in the completion of person-to-person remote auctions (such as eBay), although the advent of new low cost online escrow services has meant that even low cost transactions are now starting to benefit from use of escrow. In the UK escrow accounts are often used during private property transactions to hold solicitors' clients' money, such as the deposit, until such time as the transaction completes.[4]
[edit] Banking
Escrow is used in the field of automated banking and vending equipment. One example is automated teller machines (ATMs), and is the function which allows the machine to hold the
money deposited by the customer separately, and in case he or she challenges the counting result, the money is returned. Another example is a vending machine, where the customer's money is held in a separate escrow area pending successful completion of the transaction. If a problem occurs and the customer presses the refund button, the coins are returned from escrow; if no problem occurs, they fall into the coin vault.[9] Source code escrow agents hold source code of software in escrow just as other escrow companies hold cash. Normally you do not own or have any rights to the software (including source code) that you are accessing, under the terms of a regular SaaS or desktop software agreement. This does not usually become an issue until technical problems start to arise, i.e., unexpected service interruptions, downtime, loss of application functionality and loss of data. This can add significant costs to your business and you remain reliant upon the software supplier to resolve these issues, unless you have an escrow agreement in place. Escrow is when the software source code is held by a third party an escrow agent on behalf of the customer and the supplier.[citation needed] Information escrow agents hold in escrow intellectual property and other information. Examples include song music and lyrics, manufacturing designs and laboratory notebooks, and television and movie treatments and scripts. This is done to establish legal ownership rights, with the independent escrow agents attesting to the information's ownership, contents, and creation date.
[edit] Law
Escrow is also known in the judicial context. So-called escrow funds are commonly used to distribute money from a cash settlement in a class action or environmental enforcement action. This way the defendant is not responsible for distribution of judgment moneys to the individual plaintiffs or the court-determined use (such as environmental remediation or mitigation). The defendant pays the total amount of the judgment (or settlement) to the court-administered or appointed escrow fund, and the fund distributes the money (often reimbursing its expenses from the judgment funds).
below the minimum balance requirement. If, even at its lowest point, the escrow account has a projected balance greater than the minimum balance requirement, federal guidelinesthe Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1973 (RESPA)require that the mortgage company refund the difference to the customer. Even with a fixed interest rate, monthly mortgage payments may change over the life of the loan due to changes in property taxes and insurance premiums. For instance, if a hazard insurance premium increases by $120.00 per year, the escrow payment will need to increase by $10.00 per month to account for this difference (in addition to collection for the resulting escrow shortage when the mortgage company paid $120.00 more for the hazard insurance premium than what was anticipated). By RESPA guidelines the escrow payment must be recomputed at least once every 12 months to account for increases in property taxes or insurance. This is called an escrow analysis.