Important For Bank Examination Accounting period Annual Depreciation Bad Debt Balance sheet
Blank cheque Break Even Point Brokerage Bullion Capital Debt-Equity Ratio Credit Rating Information Services of India Limited Consumer Durables Consumer Goods Floating Capital:
Accounting period:
Blank cheque Break Even Point Brokerage Bullion Capital Debt-Equity Ratio Credit Rating Information Services of India Limited Consumer Durables Consumer Goods Floating Capital:
Funds available for carrying on a business, including funds employed in marketable investments.
The period of time covered by business, financial and
management accounts. Financial accounts are generally prepared once or twice in
twelve calendar months, but the interval of management accounts must be much
shorter in order to ensure adequate management control over the regular
operations.
Annual Depreciation:
The reduction in book value of an asset at a certain
percentage rate per annum.
Appreciation:
An increase in the value of an asset over its purchase price
or book value.
Asset:
Any business resource both tangible and intangible acquired
at monetary cost and which is expected to be of benefit to the business for a
period of time, such as buildings, machinery, etc. Intangibles include goodwill
etc. Any resource of a deceased or insolvent person from which claims may be
met.
Bad Debt:
A debt which is irrecoverable and is therefore written off
as a loss in the accounts of a company/bank etc.
Balance sheet:
Statement of the financial position of a company on a
particular date, showing the nature and amount of a company's assets and
liabilities on a particular date, usually the end of the accounting year. The
assets include fixed assets, investment, current assets (which include
Inventories, sundry debtors, cash and bank balances) and loans and advances.
The liabilities include shareholders' fund (equity capital plus reserves). Loan
funds (secured and unsecured loans) and current liabilities and provisions. The
assets and liabilities must balance.
Blank cheque:
A cheque which has been signed and dated but in which the
amount payable has not been filled in. This is left for the payee to insert.
Break Even Point:
That level of activity of a business at which neither profit
nor loss is incurred, total costs equating with total revenue. Also called
break-even performance.
Brokerage:
The payment charged by brokers for their services in
arranging a contract. It is usually expressed as a percentage of the monetary
value of the contract.
Bullion:
Gold and silver, usually in bar form, which is regarded as a
commercial commodity at recognised degrees of purity.
Capital:
All resources which have been produced by mankind and which
themselves are used in the process of production. Capital is thus different
from land, since this is a natural rather than a man made resource. The total
resources of a person or business. The sum of money subscribed by the members
of a company, by partners or by an individual when starting a company.
Central Bank:
A bank, usually state owned whose operations are directed by
the government as an instrument of financial policy. Typical functions of a
central bank include acting as banker to the state and the commercial banks,
controlling the note issue and managing the state's currency and credit
policies. The German Bundesbank and the American Federal Reserve are the most
autonomous of all central banks in the world. RBI will surely count amongst the
least autonomous ones. Autonomy of the central bank reduces government
extravagancea and minimizes political interference.
Debentures:
An instrument of debt, called bond in the US. A debenture
holder is a creditor to the company who loans funds for a period of 7-10 years
against a fixed rate of interest. After the stipulated loan period the
debentures are redeemed, i.e., the loan is paid back, sometimes with a very
small premium. Debentures are generally secured against the company's assets.
Convertible debentures can be either fully or partly converted into a certain
number of shares, usually at a premium, after a stated period of time.
Convertible debentures may carry a lower rate of interest than non convertible
debentures investment; there is little risk but also little prospect of
appreciation.
Debt-Equity Ratio:
Also called financial Leverage ratio in the US. There are
three methods of calculating this ratio, the last being more common:
1. The total liabilities of a company divided by the
shareholders' equity
2. The total long term debt divided by shareholders' equity
3. The total long term debt plus the par value of preference
shares divided by the par value of equity shares. All the three ratios measure
a company's solvency.
Depreciation:
The reduction in the value of an asset through wear and
tear, obsolescence, etc.
An accounting device by means of which the value of an asset
is converted into an expense for each of the accounting periods during which
the asset is expected to contribute value.
Disinflation:
The process or policy of removing pressures on the economy
which are forcing prices upwards and the real value of the monetary unit
downwards. Pressure may be removed by curtailing expenditure through credit
restrictions and a dear money policy, and by taxation.
Deficit:
An excess of liabilities over assets or of expenditure over
revenue.
Disinvestment:
Especially in the Indian context, it refers to the process
of offloading of shares in a firm by a party. The government of India has
partially disinvested its holding in several Public Sector undertaking (PSUs)
with the ultimate aim of privatising them to increase accountability and
productivity.
Elasticity of Demand:
A measurement of economics of the degree of response of a
change in one factor to a change in a related factor, expressed in a price
demand, price supply or demand income relationships.
Floating Capital:
Funds available for carrying on a business, including funds
employed in marketable investments.
Foreign Exchange:
The process of trading one currency for another. This takes
place on the international exchange markets where trading sets the exchange
rates of currencies. Foreign currency is required by individuals, business and
governments to finance the purchase of goods and services and to make loans to
other countries.
Free Market Economy:
An economic system where the government does not interfere
in any way in business activity.
Golden Handshake:
Compensation paid to an executive of a company on his
displacement and especially on his retirement.
Gross Domestic Product:
The value of goods and services produced in an economy. The
value may be measured by aggregating market values of goods and services or by
aggregating incomes from employment, profits, dividends, etc. (i.e., factor
cost, which is equivalent to market values less purchase tax plus subsidies).
It is equivalent to gross national product less the value of net property
abroad.
Gross National Product:
The total monetary value of all the goods and services
produced by a country in a year, expressed either at factor cost or at market
prices.
Inflation:
The rate at which prices grow in an economy. Thus, reduced
rate of inflation would mean that the rate at which prices will rise has slowed
down, but not that the prices will fall.
Liquid Assets:
Assets that can be converted into cash comparatively
quickly. They are widely regarded as comprising shares, short term bills of
exchange, bank deposits and cash itself.
Lay off:
The temporary dismissal of a worker because there is no work
to be done.
Merchandise:
Goods which are offered for sale.
National Income:
The sum of the value of goods and services available to an
economy through its economic activity in a given time period. The income many
be evaluated:
1. by adding the incomes generated by economic activity,
e.g., wages, salaries, dividends, profits and net income from abroad;
2. by adding the prices of goods and services, less indirect
taxes plus subsidies, together with government expenditure. Both methods
produce similar total and the movement in the total is indicative of economic
progress over time, once allowance is made for price inflation, population
growth, etc. Growth of national income need not be synonymous with improvement
in living standards
Real Interest Rate:
Current interest rate less the rate of inflation; of
relevance in decision regarding long term fixed interest securities. Since most
current interest is taxed, the post tax interest is likely to fall below double
digit inflation rates, which means a steady erosion of capital.
Redemption:
Buying back a loan instrument by paying off the lender. In
the case of debentures or preference shares redemption means paying back the
investor, either in cash, or through equity shares.
Sensex:
It is the sensitive index of the Bombay Stock Exchange. It
reflects the weighted average price of 30 most volatile A Group shares on the
BSE. Widely criticised to be an unrepresentative but highly influential index.
Yield:
The actual rate of return received or obtainable from an
investment, generally as the annual income calculated as a percentage of the
purchase price of the investment. The rate of return for a capital investment
project which equates the net capital expenditure with the discounted value of
futures net cash inflows. The output of a process.
Cheque:
A written order to banker authorizing him to pay a specified sum of money to a person named in the order, to his order or to bearer from funds deposited with the banker.
Consumer Durables:
Solid items bought by the general public for use in the house. These may include washing machines, cookers and refrigerators, which are likely to be in use for several years.
Consumer Goods:
Commodities or services consumed directly to satisfy a want rather than one used to produce something else. For Example: Soft drinks etc. Capital goods (like machineries), on the other hand, are used to generate some other goods.
Credit Rating:
The amount which is credit agency states a borrower is capable of repaying. Credit Rating can be done for stocks, bonds or nations themselves. Some global credit rating agencies are Standard and Poor's (S & P), Moody's etc. CRISIL is the Indian agency rating bonds etc.
Credit Rating Information Services of India Limited:
Jointly sponsored by the UTI and the Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India (ICICI), CRISIL has been functioning since January 1988. It rates the safety and timely payment of interest on debt securities like debentures and fixed deposits of public and private sector companies. The rating, subjected to periodic review, is given in alphabetical symbols preceded by d for Debentures and F for Fixed Safety, an adequate safety, B inadequate safety, C high risk, D default.
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