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the rate is equal to such a rate either:
(1)
multiplied by a fixed multiple that is greater than 0.65 but not more than 1.35; or
(2)
multiplied by a fixed multiple greater than 0.65 but not more than 1.35, and then increased or decreased by a fixed rate.
If your Security provides for two or more qualified floating rates that are within 0.25 percentage points of each other on the issue date or can reasonably be expected to have approximately the same values throughout the term of the Security, the qualified floating rates together constitute a single qualified floating rate.
Your Security will not have a qualified floating rate, however, if the rate is subject to certain restrictions (including caps, floors, governors, or other similar restrictions) unless such restrictions are caps, floors or governors that are fixed throughout the term of the Security or such restrictions are not reasonably expected to significantly affect the yield on the Security.
Your Security will have a variable rate that is a single objective rate if:
•
the rate is not a qualified floating rate, and
•
the rate is determined using a single, fixed formula that is based on objective financial or economic information that is not within the control of or unique to the circumstances of the issuer or a related party.
Your Security will not have a variable rate that is an objective rate, however, if it is reasonably expected that the average value of the rate during the first half of your Security’s term will be either significantly less than or significantly greater than the average value of the rate during the final half of your Security’s term.
An objective rate as described above is a qualified inverse floating rate if:
•
the rate is equal to a fixed rate minus a qualified floating rate, and
•
the variations in the rate can reasonably be expected to inversely reflect contemporaneous variations in the cost of newly borrowed funds (disregarding any caps, floors, governors, or other similar restrictions that would not, as described above, cause a rate to fail to be a qualified floating rate).
Your Security will also have a single qualified floating rate or an objective rate if interest on your Security is stated at a fixed rate for an initial period of one year or less followed by either a qualified floating rate or an objective rate for a subsequent period, and either:
•
the fixed rate and the qualified floating rate or objective rate have values on the issue date of the Security that do not differ by more than 0.25 percentage points or
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the value of the qualified floating rate or objective rate is intended to approximate the fixed rate.
In general, if your variable rate Security provides for stated interest at a single qualified floating rate or objective rate, or one of those rates after a single fixed rate for an initial period, all stated interest on your Security is qualified stated interest. In this case, the amount of OID, if any, is determined by using, in the case of a qualified floating rate or qualified inverse floating rate, the value as of the issue date of the qualified floating rate or qualified inverse floating rate, or, for any other objective rate, a fixed rate that reflects the yield reasonably expected for your Security.
If your variable rate Security does not provide for stated interest at a single qualified floating rate or a single objective rate, and also does not provide for interest payable at a fixed rate other than a single fixed rate for an initial period, you generally must determine the interest and OID accruals on your Security by:
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determining a fixed rate substitute for each variable rate provided under your variable rate Security,
•
constructing the equivalent fixed rate debt instrument, using the fixed rate substitute described above,