Unendorsed cheque - significado y definición. Qué es Unendorsed cheque
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Qué (quién) es Unendorsed cheque - definición

FORM OF CHECK FRAUD
Cheque kiting; Check-kiting; Cheque-kiting
  • instrument]] potentially used for kiting.

Crossing of cheques         
CHEQUE WITH A PARTICULAR MARKING OR WORDING
Crossed cheque; Uncrossed cheque
A crossed cheque is a cheque that has been marked specifying an instruction on the way it is to be redeemed. A common instruction is for the cheque to be deposited directly to an account with a bank and not to be immediately cashed by the holder over the bank counter.
cheque book         
  • Symbolic cheques are used at events to depict money offered to the payee.
  • A cheque from 1933
  • Presentation of the [[Ansari X Prize]] $10 million award
  •  Machine readable routing and account information
}}
  • A cheque with [[Thomas Jefferson]] as payee and payor from 1809
  • A sample cheque issued by [[UCO Bank]] in India
  • Cheques may be valid regardless of amount.
  • A cheque from 1905
METHOD OF PAYMENT
Cheques; Bearer cheque; Bearer check; Bearer Cheque; Bearer Check; Check (finance); Bank Draft; Bank Check; Personal check; Checkbook; Cheque book; Third-party cheque; Counter check; Counter checks; Cheque-book; Chequebook; Cut a check; Bank Cheques; Personal checks; Personal cheque; Check (payment); Stale dated; Cancelled Check; Account Payee; Rubber cheque; Giant check; Stale-dated check; Counterfoil; Check (money); Check (financial instrument); Oversized check; Oversized checks; Oversized cheque; Oversized cheques; Chequing; Bank cheques; Cheq
(cheque books)
Note: The spellings 'chequebook', and in American English 'checkbook', are also used.
A cheque book is a book of cheques which your bank gives you so that you can pay for things by cheque.
N-COUNT
Cheque         
  • Symbolic cheques are used at events to depict money offered to the payee.
  • A cheque from 1933
  • Presentation of the [[Ansari X Prize]] $10 million award
  •  Machine readable routing and account information
}}
  • A cheque with [[Thomas Jefferson]] as payee and payor from 1809
  • A sample cheque issued by [[UCO Bank]] in India
  • Cheques may be valid regardless of amount.
  • A cheque from 1905
METHOD OF PAYMENT
Cheques; Bearer cheque; Bearer check; Bearer Cheque; Bearer Check; Check (finance); Bank Draft; Bank Check; Personal check; Checkbook; Cheque book; Third-party cheque; Counter check; Counter checks; Cheque-book; Chequebook; Cut a check; Bank Cheques; Personal checks; Personal cheque; Check (payment); Stale dated; Cancelled Check; Account Payee; Rubber cheque; Giant check; Stale-dated check; Counterfoil; Check (money); Check (financial instrument); Oversized check; Oversized checks; Oversized cheque; Oversized cheques; Chequing; Bank cheques; Cheq
·noun ·see Check.

Wikipedia

Check kiting

Check kiting or cheque kiting (see spelling differences) is a form of check fraud, involving taking advantage of the float to make use of non-existent funds in a checking or other bank account. In this way, instead of being used as a negotiable instrument, checks are misused as a form of unauthorized credit.

Kiting is commonly defined as intentionally writing a check for a value greater than the account balance from an account in one bank, then writing a check from another account in another bank, also with non-sufficient funds, with the second check serving to cover the non-existent funds from the first account. The purpose of check kiting is to falsely inflate the balance of a checking account in order to allow written checks to clear that would otherwise bounce. If the account is not planned to be replenished, then the fraud is colloquially known as paper hanging. If writing a check with insufficient funds is done with the expectation they will be covered by payday it is called playing the float.

Some forms of check fraud involve the use of a second bank or a third party, often a place of retail, in order to delay the absence of funds in a transactional account on the day the check is due to clear at the bank. Such acts are frequently committed by bankrupt or temporarily unemployed individuals or small businesses seeking emergency loans, by start-up businesses or other struggling businesses seeking interest-free financing while intending to make good on their balances, or by pathological gamblers who have the expectation of depositing funds upon winning. It has also been used by those who have some genuine funds in interest-bearing accounts, but who artificially inflate their balances to increase the interest paid by their banks. Criminals have taken advantage of the check float to pass fraudulent checks through solicited users of online auctions.