- fee
- A fixed amount or a percentage of an underwriting or principal. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary
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fee fee [fiː] noun1. [countable] COMMERCE an amount of money paid to a professional person or organization for their services:• If you want help selecting a policy, you might want to use an insurance adviser who charges a fee, but earns no commission.
fee for• Cable TV subscribers pay a monthly fee for the service.
adˈvance fee [countable] COMMERCEan amount of money paid for services before they are delivered:• Thousands of people have been conned into advance fee loan schemes.
adˈvisory fee [countable] FINANCEa sum of money paid for investment advice given by a mutual fund:• The advisory fee for the $13. 6 billion Windsor fund was cut 20 percent.
ˈbreak fee [countable] LAW1. LAW an amount of money that a company has to pay if it breaks an agreement to sell the company to another company2. an amount of money that you have to pay if you end a contract before the agreed timecapiˈtation ˌfee [countable] COMMERCEa payment or charge that is made for each person:• Schools received a capitation fee for every pupil in the school.
a sum of money paid to a bank for agreeing to make a loan:• Your company will have to pay a commitment fee of 0.15% for the new bank credit line.
conˈtingency ˌfee also conˈtingent ˌfee [countable]LAW when a lawyer is paid a percentage of any damage S (= money for loss or injury) that they win for their client:• In settling a personal injury case, a contingency fee contract with his client gave Mr Goodman one-third of the $3 million award.
distriˈbution ˌfee [countable] COMMERCEa sum of money charged by a film-making company to make a film available to cinemas:• The new Batman movie has returned revenue to Warner of $253.4 million; from that sum, Warner deducted $80.4 million for the studio's distribution fee.
ˈentry ˌfee [countable] COMMERCEa sum of money charged to join an organization, to go into a particular place, or to take part in a competition:• The entry fee is $10 for adults and $6 for children under 14.
a set amount paid for work or a service, that does not change with the time the work takes or the amount the service is used:• Quebec doctors get a fixed fee for each medical service performed.
• Airlines usually charge a flat fee for unlimited use of their reservation systems.
inˈcentive ˌfee1. [countable] HUMAN RESOURCES an amount paid to a person or organization for carrying out their work to a high standard:• Harrah's will receive an incentive fee if it hits certain goals.
2. [countable] FINANCE an amount of money an investor pays to a dealer who is working for them if the dealer succeeds in making an agreed profit:• The rate includes an incentive fee of 12.5%.
the money that the owner of a port or airport charges owners of ships or aircraft to pay for using it:• Landing fees at airports are based on aircraft weight.
money paid to a person or organization for permission to use their ideas or designs:• The software company received a $4 million license fee from Siemens for use of its technology in developing medical diagnostic products.
another name for licence feeˈmanagement ˌfee [countable] COMMERCEmoney paid to a person or organization that operates a business activity for another person or organization:• The business receives a management fee from the investors for managing and operating the properties.
ˈsales ˌfee [countable] FINANCEmoney paid to a mutual fund by an investor when putting money into the fund:• If an investor puts $10,000 into a mutual fund that charges a 5% sales commission, $500 would go toward the sales fee, and, as a result, only $9,500 would be invested in the fund.
ˈscale ˌfee [countable] LAWa way of charging for legal work based on a standard scale, rather than based on the amount of work done:• The maximum conveyancing charge of £700 was a considerable saving on the scale fee traditionally charged by solicitors in London.
an amount of money charged for transferring money, shares, property etc from one person to another:• The lending association ensures customer loyalty by imposing a £150 transfer fee.
tuˈition ˌfees [plural]money paid by or for a student to a university or similar institution for its courses:• Universities plan to raise tuition fees for overseas students.
ˈupfront ˌfee• In return for a $500 upfront fee, the broker promised to help Mr Haze find money.
2. [countable] FINANCE an amount of money paid by an investor to a mutual fund to manage their investment; = LOAD:• An investor who places $10,000 for 15 years in a fund that charges an upfront fee of 0.75% of assets pays the equivalent of a $900 load.
2. [countable] COMMERCE an amount of money paid to an author, musician etc for a book, piece of music etc that they have written; = ROYALTY:• The publisher canceled publication and refused to pay the author a promised $900,000 fee.
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fee UK US /fiː/ noun [C] FINANCE► an amount of money paid for a particular piece of work or for a particular right or service: agree/charge/collect, etc. a fee »He's good, but he charges huge fees.
a fee of £50/$20 million/100 euros, etc. »The two clubs agreed a fee of £50 million for the player.
pay £1000/$20,000/90 euros, etc. in fees »The airline paid $130 million in fees to advisers.
cut/increase/put up, etc. fees »The bank has cut its admin fees to attract new customers.
fee on sth »The credit-card company collects a fee on every transaction.
fee for (doing) sth »Some banks charge a fee for using other banks' cash machines.
»An agency will advise you for a fee.
»annual/monthly fees
»administrative/consulting/legal, etc. fees
→ See also ADVANCE FEE(Cf. ↑advance fee), ADVISORY FEE(Cf. ↑advisory fee), ADVANCE FEE(Cf. ↑advance fee), BREAK FEE(Cf. ↑break fee), BREAK-UP FEE(Cf. ↑break-up fee), CAPITATION FEE(Cf. ↑capitation fee), COMMITMENT FEE(Cf. ↑commitment fee), CONTINGENCY FEE(Cf. ↑contingency fee), DISTRIBUTION FEE(Cf. ↑distribution fee), ENTRY FEE(Cf. ↑entry fee), FLAT FEE(Cf. ↑flat fee), INCENTIVE FEE(Cf. ↑incentive fee), LANDING CHARGE(Cf. ↑landing charge), LATE FEE(Cf. ↑late fee), LICENCE FEE(Cf. ↑licence fee), MANAGEMENT FEE(Cf. ↑management fee), NO WIN, NO FEE(Cf. ↑no win, no fee), SALES FEE(Cf. ↑sales fee), SCALE FEE(Cf. ↑scale fee), TRANSFER FEE(Cf. ↑transfer fee), UP-FRONT FEE(Cf. ↑up-front fee), USER FEE(Cf. ↑user fee)
Financial and business terms. 2012.