From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbondholderbond‧hold‧er /ˈbɒndˌhəʊldə $ ˈbɑːndˌhoʊldər/ noun [countable] BFS technical someone who owns government or industrial bonds
Examples from the Corpus
bondholder• Eurosterling bondholders tend to prefer protective covenants that prevent a deterioration in credit quality, whereas eurodollar bondholders prefer the put-at-par option.• This left the mortgage bondholder holding cash.• Auditors some-times miss big potential problems that blow up in the face of bondholders.• The playing bondholders were also asked to pay the new extra, voluntary subscription and non-players had to forego their meagre interest.• It is widely expected that bondholders will then be asked to convert some of their holdings into a new convertible preference share.• The bondholders elected their committee representatives, i.e. eight bondholders to the Club's four ordinary members.• Preferred dividends are deducted because, unlike interest paid to bondholders, they are not a tax-deductible expense of doing business.• It is a curious turn around from the days when bondholders pleased to be bought out and were driving to drawing lots!From Longman Business Dictionarybondholderbond‧hold‧er /ˈbɒndˌhəʊldəˈbɑːndˌhoʊldər/ noun [countable]FINANCE a person or organization that owns bondsThe company can seek bankruptcy court approval for a reorganization plan if it receives approval from at least half of the bondholders → junior bondholder → senior bondholder