A floater (floating-rate note) that gives the bondholder the right to convert a note with a long maturity date or no maturity (no redemption date) into a note with a short maturity date. Furthermore, the bondholder has the right to convert back into the original note before the short-dated note reaches maturity. The short-dated note typically pays a lower spread over its floating rate (LIBOR) than the the long-dated note, but this is compensated for in the possibility of receiving principal repayment by the bondholder much earlier.
A flip-flop floating-rate note is also known as a flip-flop floater.
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