Define: If any

The meaning of “If any” differs based on where it is used. We list many below, then combine them into one or more market-standard definitions.

  • If any means there may be no requirement for the premium. Seen in 2 SEC filings
  • If any means If there is any responsibility to compensate for a loss connected to the insured risk. Seen in 1 SEC filing
  • If any means the fee due by [organization] in relation to every [purchase contract], equivalent to [number]% annually of the stated amount. There is no payment due if this percentage is 0%. This is calculated on the assumption of a 360-day year consisting of twelve 30-day months, in addition to any outstanding contract adjustments accrued. Seen in 1 SEC filing

Note: The Genie AI Legal Assistant pulled this data out of the SEC EDGAR Database of 500,000 records from the past 22 years of filings. We regularly update this page as new filings and definitions come in.

Search EDGAR for 'Definitions of if any' yourself to verify these results. We are always keen to point people to source documents.

Which definition should you use?

🤔 Our AI Legal Assistant has combined and improved the above descriptions to create market-standard 'Genie definitions' below, with guidance on which documents and which industry to use for each.

Genie Definition 1

  • If any means there is no requirement or obligation, such as a premium or fee.

Relevant Contract Types

Relevant Circumstances

  • Where no obligation for payment is outlined.
  • In clauses defining potential payments on occurrence of set conditions.

Relevant Sectors

What is the most popular definition of 'If any'?

If any means there is no requirement or obligation, such as a premium or fee.

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