Alternately, a
capital note is a
bond with a very long
maturity horizon, reaching several decades (sometimes as much as 50 or 100 years). Unlike equity securities, these capital notes
do mature at some point; therefore, they form part of the company's
liabilities and not part of
equity. However, since their maturity is so far in the future, they are treated as equity for practical purposes; the company keeps the money raised through them inside its balance sheet for a very long time.
Banks and other financial institutions issue these bonds to satisfy regulatory demands regarding
capital requirements, specifically under the
Basel Accords. In the Basel "tiers" system, capital notes are treated as close to equity, as both reinforce the bank's "capital". Additionally, bank capital notes are usually not
collateralized and are contractually
subordinated, forming a junior class of debt. Similar terms might be found in redeemable
preferred shares. Contrary to the warrant-like capital notes described above, these capital notes are usually not convertible, so they represent no current or future stake in the corporation's equity (
share capital). ==Structured finance==