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nachrangige

Nachrangige (subordinated) is a German term used in finance and law to describe claims, securities, or capital instruments that rank behind senior or secured claims in the payment order during insolvency or liquidation. Subordinated claims are repaid only after higher-priority claims have been satisfied, which makes them riskier but typically associated with higher interest or yields.

In insolvency law, creditor claims are paid according to a fixed hierarchy. Secured creditors with collateral

In the banking sector, subordinated debt is commonly used to reinforce regulatory capital, classified as Tier

Usage varies by jurisdiction, and the exact ranking can differ in national insolvency acts. Generally, nachrangig

are
paid
first,
followed
by
unsecured
senior
creditors.
Subordinated
creditors
are
paid
after
these
groups,
and
shareholders
are
last.
Subordinated
instruments
can
include
Nachrangdarlehen
(subordinated
loans),
bonds
with
a
subordinated
status,
or
hybrid
capital.
They
are
often
unsecured
and
may
carry
features
such
as
higher
coupons,
step-up
provisions,
or
conversion
rights
into
equity.
2
capital
under
international
standards
(Basel
II/III).
Such
instruments
help
banks
meet
capital
adequacy
requirements
but
bear
higher
risk
for
investors,
who
face
a
greater
likelihood
of
loss
in
insolvency
scenarios.
Some
subordinated
instruments
may
be
written
down
or
converted
to
equity
in
resolution
processes
(bail-in),
depending
on
jurisdiction
and
contractual
terms.
signals
that
a
claim
is
subordinate
to
others
and
thus
bears
greater
credit
risk,
in
exchange
for
higher
potential
return.