| Acceleration Clause:
A loan contract clause stating that if
you are in default, your creditor can
demand payment of the entire balance of
your loan at once, before its scheduled
maturity. |
| "S" corporation: A specific
IRS designation which allows a corporation
to be taxed similarly to a partnership,
yet retain limited liability for its shareholders. |
| 10-K is the audited annual
report that most reporting companies file
with the Securities Exchange Commission
(SEC). It provides a comprehensive overview
of the registrant's business. The report
must be filed within 90 days after the
end of the company's fiscal year. |
| 10-Q is a report filed
quarterly to the Securities Exchange Commission
(SEC) by most reporting companies. It
includes unaudited financial statements
and provides a continuing view of the
company's financial position during the
year. The report must be filed for each
of the first three fiscal quarters of
the company's fiscal year and is due within
45 days of the close of the quarter. |
| 13TH PERIOD in the fiscal
year is the period used for fiscal year-end
adjusting entries (periods 1-12 being
the months in the fiscal year). |
| 2. Sustainable Growth
Rate (showing the degree to which a company
can grow using retained earnings to fund
growth). |
| 3% RULE see THREE PERCENT
RULE. |
| 401 (K) PLAN is a retirement
plan in the United States that allows
qualified employees to contribute money
from their paychecks into a tax-sheltered
account. |
| 4-4-5 CALENDAR, in budgeting
and accounting, is the breakdown of each
month into weeks by counting the number
of times Friday occurs within each month,
e.g., Jan = 4 weeks, Feb = 4 weeks, Mar
= 5 weeks, Apr = 4 weeks, May = 4 weeks,
Jun = 5 weeks… etc. to total 52 weeks
in a 12 month period. Every third month,
Friday will occur 5 times. All other months,
Friday will occur 4 times. In the months
where Friday occurs 5 times, it is considered
a 5 week month. Whereas, the 4 Friday
months will be considered as 4 week months. |
| A&E can mean either Appropriation
& Expense or Analysis & Evaluation. |
| A&P is an acronym for
Administrative and Personnel. |
| ABA (Accredited Business
Accountant or Accredited Business Advisor),
in the US, is a national credential conferred
by Accreditation Council for Accountancy
and Taxation to professionals who specialize
in supporting the financial needs of individuals
and small to medium sized businesses.
ABA is the only nationally recognized
alternative to the CPA. Most accredited
individuals do not perform audits. Generally,
they are small business owners themselves.
In addition to general accounting work,
CPAs are also heavily schooled in performing
audits; however, only a small fraction
of America's businesses require an audit.
In general, a CPA has majored in accounting,
passed the CPA examination and is licensed
to perform audits. An ABA has majored
in accounting, passed the ABA comprehensive
examination and in most states is not
licensed to perform audits. |
| ABATEMENT - The reduction
of a gift under will because of insufficiency
of assets to satisfy all the gifts after
the legal obligations of the estate (debts,
taxes, charges, and claims) have been
paid in full. The general rule is that
all gifts of the same class shall abate
proportionately, unless otherwise provided. |
| ABC FIRE EXTINGUISHER:
Chemically based devices used to eliminate
ordinary combustible, flammable liquid,
and electrical fires. |
| absolute advantage the
ability to produce a specific product
more efficiently than any other nation |
| ABSTRACT OF TITLE- A
summary of all essential facts relating
to the title to a parcel of real property. |
| ACCELERATED COST RECOVERY
SYSTEM - A method for determining depreciation
using statutory percentages of the cost
basis of property over a given life as
opposed to the declining balance method,
straight-line depreciation or sum--of-the-digits
method; a term frequently found in tax
returns. |
| Accelerated depreciation.
A depreciation method that allows larger
deductions in the early years of an asset's
"life" and smaller deductions at the end
of the period. (See "Straight-line depreciation.") |
| Accelerated Depreciation.
A method of calculating depreciation where
deductions are higher in the early years
of the asset's life. Contrasted with straight-line
depreciation where deductions are equal
for each year of the life of the asset. |
| ACCELERATED REMAINDER-
The property which passes to the remainder-man
through the failure of the income or preceding
beneficiary. |
| ACCELERATION - The advancement
of the interest where a trust is created
for one beneficiary for life or for a
term of years and for another in remainder,
and the trust fails as to the interest
for life or the term. |
| Acceleration Clause.
A clause (often in mortgages or other
loans) where some action will occur ahead
of schedule as a result of some other
action. For example, an acceleration clause
in a loan may mean that the full amount
is due immediately if the debtor misses
two monthly payments in a row. |
| Acceptance of bill of
exchange: Recognition of a legal obligation
to pay the amount on a term bill of exchange
at a specified future date (maturity date). |
| acceptance sampling is
sampling to determine whether internal
control compliance is greater than or
less than the tolerable deviation rate. |
| accessory equipment standardized
equipment used in a firm’s production
or office activities |
| ACCOUNT – A term commonly
used within the advertising business to
refer to the corporate entity employing
an advertising agency. MJM's account roster
includes a wide variety of businesses
and service organizations. |
| Account a record of a
business transaction. When you buy something
on credit, the company you are dealing
with sets up an "account". This means
it sets up a record of what you buy and
what you pay. You will do the same thing
with any customers to whom you extend
credit. |
| ACCOUNT COORDINATOR –
The advertising agency employee responsible
for much of the day-to-day business of
servicing an account. Motto Advertising
takes pride in the expertise and dedication
of our account coordinators, who assist
account executives and oversee traffic,
production and media scheduling within
the agency. |
| ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE (A/E)
– The agency employee responsible for
a client’s marketing and administrative
efforts. At Motto Advertising, account
executives deal directly with the client,
vendors and the media. Our AE’s are all
highly experienced and have more autonomy
than at most other agencies. |
| account executive (or
stock broker) an individual—sometimes
called a stock broker or registered representative—who
buys and sells securities for clients |
| account payee only words
often written on crossed cheques, which
direct the bank to pay the cheque only
to the bank account of the payee. |
| Account: A record that
holds the results of financial transactions. |
| accountability the obligation
of a worker to accomplish an assigned
job or task |
| accountant a qualified
person who is skilled at managing and
analysing business financial records. |
| Accountant's Equation:
The equation that is the basis of the
Balance Sheet: Assets = Liabilities +
Owners' Equity. (Also, the response to
"What does 1 + 1 equal?": "What do you
want it to equal?") |
| Accountant's Opinion.
If a independent certified public accountant
is requested to audit a company's books,
he will issue a opinion as to the condition
of the financial statements. There are
several degrees of opinion from clean
to adverse. A clean opinion doesn't mean
that every number is correct, only that
the financials fairly represent the position
of the company. An adverse opinion means
the financials don't represent the position
of the company. A disclaimer means the
auditor can't (for any number of reasons)
express an opinion on the statements. |
| ACCOUNTING - (1) The
record of an account showing the transactions
therein. (2) The submission of such a
record to the court or to the beneficiaries
of a trust or estate by the fiduciary. |
| Accounting - The recording,
classifying, summarizing and interpreting
in a significant manner and in terms of
money, transactions and events of a financial
character. |
| accounting and review
services are official pronouncements covering
compilation and review engagements. Compilation
is presenting in the form of financial
statements information that is the representation
of management (owners) without expressing
assurance. Review is inquiry and analytical
procedures to provide the accountant a
basis for expressing limited assurance
that there are no material modifications
that should be made to the statements
for them to be in conformity with U.S.
generally accepted accounting principles
or, if applicable, another comprehensive
basis of accounting. |
| Accounting Controls.
Methods and procedures intended to safeguard
assets, authorize transactions, and ensure
the accuracy of financial records. |
| accounting data includes
journals, ledgers and other records such
as spreadsheets that support financial
statements. It may be in computer readable
form or on paper. |
| accounting equation the
basis for the accounting process: assets
= liabilities + owners’ equity |
| Accounting Equation.
Simply stated, assets are equal to liabilities
plus owners' equity. |
| accounting estimate An
approximation of a financial statement
element. Accounting estimates are often
included in historical financial statements
because measurement of some amounts is
uncertain pending outcome of future events
and relevant data about events that have
occurred cannot be accumulated on a timely,
cost-effective basis. |
| Accounting Method. Any
number of approaches for calculating the
income of an entity. Usually applied to
the general means of recognizing income
and expenses, e.g., cash or accrual. But
it can also apply to method of keeping
inventories, etc. |
| ACCOUNTING PERIOD A period
of time, (month, quarter, year), for which
a financial statement is produced. |
| Accounting period The
time period between successive closings
of the books of a business. An accounting
period usually is a month, three months
(a quarter), or a year (a fiscal year
or a calendar year) corresponding to the
tax year used by the business. |
| accounting principles
are alternative ways of reporting and
disclosing information in financial statements
and related footnotes. |
| Accounting Procedure.
Similar to accounting method, but applied
to more routine issues. For example, the
method of computing depreciation, handling
small capital expenditures. |
| accounting program a
software package that enables users to
record and report financial information |
| Accounting Rate of Return.
A method of computing the profitability
where the total cash inflow over the life
of the project is reduced by expenses.
This amount is divided by the estimated
life of the project to arrive at an annual
return. That's divided by the investment's
cost. The result is an average rate of
return. |
| accounting the process
of systematically collecting, analyzing,
and reporting financial information |
| Accounting: A service
that oversees, measures, and evaluates
financial information for decision making
purposes. |
| Accounts Payable - Short-term
debts incurred as the result of day-to-day
operations. |
| Accounts Payable - Trade
accounts of businesses representing obligations
to pay for goods and services received. |
| accounts payable is money
you owe to suppliers and other business
creditors as a result of purchases of
stock and other expenses such as overheads
and taxes. |
| Accounts Payable The
amount a company owes for goods already
received. An account in the general ledger
representing the amount owed by the business
to its creditors on open purchases of
goods and/or services. |
| ACCOUNTS PAYABLE This
represents what a business owes to its
suppliers and other creditors at a given
point in time. |
| accounts payable short-term
obligations that arise as a result of
making credit purchases |
| Accounts Payable. A liability
arising when a vendor provides goods or
services that are not immediately paid
for and where the liability is not formalized
in writing but backed by the reputation
and credit worthiness of the debtor. When
a business using the accrual basis of
accounting purchases goods or services
the company reports an expense and an
account payable. When payment is made
the account payable is reduced. |
| Accounts Payable: The
amount of money that you owe for goods
or services that you bought. |
| Accounts Payable: Amounts
due from your business to your creditors.
Generally these are short term liabilities
(30-120 days), and are shown under the
Current Liabilities section in the Balance
Sheet. (What you owe to other folks.) |
| Accounts Receivable -
monies due your business as the result
of day-to-day operations. |
| Accounts Receivable -
Trade accounts of businesses representing
moneys due for goods sold or services
rendered evidenced by notes, statements,
invoices or other written evidence of
a present obligation. |
| accounts receivable a
record of what is owed to you. All of
the credit "accounts" - the record of
what each customer owes you - taken together
are your "accounts receivable". |
| accounts receivable Debts
due from customers from sales of products
and services. Normally a current asset. |
| Accounts Receivable Financing.
Financing where the company's accounts
receivable are used as collateral. This
type of financing is usually short-term
in nature. |
| Accounts Receivable The
amount a company is owed for goods it
sold on credit. An account in the general
ledger representing the amount due the
business from its customers for goods
and/or services sold on credit. |
| ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE This
represents the amount due to a business
by its customers at a given point in time. |
| accounts receivable turnover a
financial ratio calculated by dividing
net sales by accounts receivable |
| Accounts Receivable Turnover.
Ratio obtained by dividing total credit
sales by accounts receivable. The result
indicates how many times the receivables
have been collected during the period
covered by the sales. It's a measure of
how well the company is collecting it's
accounts receivable. |
| Accounts Receivable Turnover:
A measure used to determine a company's
average collection period for receivables.
Usually computed by dividing net sales
(or net credit sales) by average accounts
receivable. |
| Accounts Receivable.
Claims to cash on account that are expected
to be paid within one year. |
| Accounts Receivable.
For accrual basis businesses, transactions
not paid in cash create an account receivable,
an unsecured promise to pay in the future.
The accounting entry is a debit to accounts
receivable and a credit to sales. On payment,
the account receivable is credited and
cash is debited. |
| Accounts Receivable:
The amount of money that people or companies
owe you. |
| Accounts Receivable:
Amounts due to your business from your
customers. Generally these amounts are
short term receivables (30-120 days),
and are shown under Current Assets section
in the Balance Sheet. (What other folks
owe you.) |
| accounts receivables amounts
that are owed to a firm by its customers |
| ACCRETION - The increase
or extension of the boundaries, or the
acquisition of land by the gradual or
imperceptible action of natural forces
as by the washing up of sand or soil from
the sea or a river, or by a gradual recession
of the water from the usual watermark. |
| Accrual Accounting -
A method of reporting income when earned
and expenses when incurred, as opposed
to reporting income when received and
expenses when paid. |
| ACCRUAL ACCOUNTING A
method of bookkeeping in which income
and expenses are allocated to periods
to which they apply, regardless of when
actually received or paid. For example,
when an invoice is rendered, its value
is added to income immediately, even though
it has not been paid. (Also see CASH ACCOUNTING) |
| Accrual Accounting. Under
this method of accounting, income is recognized
when earned, whether or not collected,
and expenses are recognized when events
have occurred that determine that a liability
exists and the amount of the liability
can be ascertained with reasonable accuracy.
For example, at December 31 you ship a
customer 100 widgets. You have to record
the income in that year, even though you
won't get paid until the following year.
If you were buying the widgets, you could
accrue the expense in the tax year you
ordered them. There are some special rules
for tax purposes and there can be a significant
divergence between recognition of income
and expenses for tax and financial accounting
purposes. |
| Accrual Based Accounting
- an accounting method that enters income
and expenses into the books at the time
of contract versus when payment is received
or expenses incurred. |
| Accrual Basis Accounting:
The practice of bookkeeping when income
is recorded when earned and expenses are
recorded when they are incurred. (Opposite
of Cash Basis Accounting, the way you
run your personal checkbook; personal
finances are almost always cash basis.
Believe it or not, Accrual Basis accounting
turns out to be a truer way of showing
the profitability of your business.) |
| Accrual method - reporting
income when it is earned, though one may
receive payment in a later year. Expenses
are deducted in the tax year they are
incurred, whether or not they are paid
in the same year. |
| Accrual method (or accrual
basis). One of two main accounting methods
for determining when a transaction has
tax significance. The accrual method says
that a transaction is taxed when an obligation
to pay or a right to receive payment is
created (for example, at the time products
are delivered, services rendered, billings
sent, etc.). This method is used by all
but the smallest businesses. (See "Cash
method (or cash basis).") |
| Accrual Method An accounting
method under which income is subject to
tax after all events have occurred which
fix the right to receive such income and
deductions are allowed when all the events
have occurred to fix the obligation to
pay the debt. |
| accrual method of accounting
— Used for most corporate financial statements.
Revenues are counted during the time they’re
earned, and expenses are counted during
the time they’re incurred. Cash doesn’t
need to change hands to be recorded. This
is a fuller way of looking at financial
health. It’s as if you kept records not
just of checks you’d written and deposits
you made, but also of what you owed on
your credit cards and what you were owed
by others. You can feel pretty rich if
your checking account is flush, but if
you owe thousands on your credit card
and don’t take that into account, you
can spend yourself into trouble. |
| Accrual-basis accounting
In accrual-based accounting, revenues
are recorded at the time they are earned
(payment may be received in another period);
and expenses are recorded when incurred
(often not in the period when they are
paid). |
| Accrual-basis income
statement An income statement compiled
from accrual-basis accounting. Revenues
are credited in the accounting period
when earned; expenses are charged in the
accounting period when incurred. Compared
to other types of income statements, the
accrual-basis income statement usually
gives the most accurate measures of income
or loss. |
| Accruals Amounts owed
to or owed by a business that have not
yet been recorded in the books of the
business. |
| Accrue. To record an
item in the accounting books when using
the accrual method of accounting. For
example, you accrue income when the customer
signs a contract, even though you won't
receive any cash at that time. When you
accrue an item of income or expense can
depend on a number of factors including
the entity's procedures. IRS requirements
here frequently diverge from accounting
rules. |
| Accrued Expense. An expense
that has been incurred, but not yet paid
in cash. Similar to accounts payable,
but usually associated with nontrade vendors.
For example, an electric bill. |
| Accrued Interest - The
interest that has accumulated since the
last interest payment up to, but not including,
the settlement date and that is added
to the contract price of a bond transaction.
There are two methods for calculating
accrued interest: the 30-day-month (360-da |
| Accrued Revenue. Income
that has been earned (by the sale of goods
or performance of services) but where
payment has not been received in cash.
Similar to accounts receivable. |
| Accumulated depreciation
The total of depreciation amounts taken
since the time a depreciable asset was
put in service. (Charges for depletion
of natural resources and amortization
of intangibles also are accumulated and
reported on the balance sheet.) |
| Accumulated Depreciation.
The total depreciation taken on an asset
since it was acquired. |
| acid-test ratio a financial
ratio calculated by subtracting the value
of inventory from the current asset amount
and dividing the total by current liabilities |
| Acid-Test Ratio. Also
called the quick ratio, it's equal to
the sum of cash, short-term investments
and net current receivables divided by
current liabilities. It's a measure of
whether or not the business could pay
all its current liabilities if they came
due immediately. |
| ACKNOWLEDGMENT - (1)
A declaration or avowal of ones act or
of a fact to give it legal validity, especially
before a duly qualified public officer.
(2) The formal certificate made by an
officer before whom one has acknowledged
a deed or other legal instrument. |
| Acquisition - The acquiring
of supplies or services by the federal
government with appropriated funds through
purchase or lease. |
| Acquisitions in relation
to the GST, acquisitions include the things
you buy (goods, services and anything
else) for your business. They also include
many other transactions, such as obtaining
advice or information, taking out a lease
of business premises or hiring business
equipment. |
| ACTION CARDS – A mail-order
device in which a set of postcards with
order forms and return addresses for a
variety of products and companies is wrapped
in plastic and sent to demographically
and/or psychographically selected potential
customers. |
| ACTIVATION: When all
or a portion of the recovery plan has
been put into motion. |
| Active Corps of Executives
(ACE) a group of active managers who
counsel small-business owners on a volunteer
basis |
| Active Participation.
Involvement in a rental real estate activity
making management decisions. Requires
no specific number of hours. |
| ACTIVE TRUST - A trust
regarding which the trustee has some active
duty to perform; opposed to bare, naked,
or passive trust. |
| Activity. For the passive
activity rules, it's the integral economic
unit for measuring a taxpayer's level
of participation in a trade or business.
One location can have more than one business
activity. For example, you might have
an S corporation that sells computers
at retail and does typesetting working
out of the same location. The two may
be separate activities. On the other hand,
two or more related businesses can also
be combined into one activity. |
| Actual Expenses - refers
to car and truck expenses. Method used
to deduct costs of operating and maintaining
a car or truck in your business, for example,
depreciation, gas, repairs, etc. Expenses
must be divided between business and personal
use if used in both. |
| ACTUARY - A statistician
who computes insurance and pension rates
and premiums on the basis of experience
tables. |
| Actuary a mathematician
whose work is mainly concerned with insurance
and finance. |
| ad hoc committee a committee
created for a specific short-term purpose |
| Ad valorem: According
to value. |
| ADB: Asia Development
Bank, an international lending institution
head quartered in Manila, Philippines. |
| Additional Paid-In Capital.
Equity contributions to a corporation
in excess of the amount of capital stock. |
| Add-On Interest. Interest
that isn't paid by the debtor, but added
to the principal amount. |
| ADJUDICATION - The decision
of a competent court with regard to matters
in dispute; to be distinguished from arbitration. |
| Adjustable Rate Mortgage
(ARM): A contractual loan may have provision
for adjustable rates. In the case of a
home mortgage loan, the interest rate
changes over time with movements in an
index. |
| Adjusted basis. The cost
of property (or a substitute figure-see
"Basis") with adjustments made to account
for depreciation (in the case of business
property), improvements (in the case of
real estate), withdrawals or reinvestment
(in the case of securities, funds, accounts,
insurance or annuities), etc. Adjusted
basis is part of the computation for determining
gain or loss on a sale or exchange and
for depreciation. |
| Adjusted Basis. Used
for determining depreciation and gain
or loss on the disposition of an asset.
Your adjusted basis in an asset is your
beginning basis (see Basis, below), decreased
by depreciation, depletion or any Sec.
179 expense taken or increased by capital
additions. For example, you purchase a
machine for $10,000 (your basis) and take
a Sec. 179 expense deduction of $1,000
and depreciation of $2,000 in the first
year. At the end of the year your adjusted
basis is $7,000. Note. Even professionals
often say basis when they really mean
adjusted basis. |
| Adjusted Gross Income.
Also known as AGI, it's your individual
income before personal exemptions or standard
or itemized deductions. It's the total
of wages, interest, dividends, capital
gains (or up to $3,000 in losses), profit
or loss from real estate or pass-through
entities (e.g., S corporation), pension
income and certain other items less contributions
to an IRA or Keogh plan, one-half of any
self- employment income, and health insurance
for self-employed individuals, and certain
other deductions. |
| Adjusted gross income.
The amount of income considered actually
"available" to be taxed. Adjusted gross
income is gross income reduced principally
by business expenses incurred to earn
the income and other specified reductions
(such as alimony). |
| Adjusted Trial Balance.
A list of all the ledger accounts with
their adjustments and the adjusted balances. |
| adjusting entries are
accounting entries made at the end of
an accounting period to allocate items
between accounting periods. |
| Adjusting Entry. An entry
made at the end of the period to assign
expenses to the period for which they
were incurred and revenue to the period
in which it was earned. They are also
used to correct entries that could not
be accurately made before the end of the
year. |
| Adjustment Period: The
length of time between interest rate changes
on an ARM. |
| ADMINISTRATION - The
care and management of an estate by a
trustee or a guardian; to be distinguished
from the settlement of an estate by an
executor or an administrator. |
| administrative law the
regulations created by government agencies
that have been established by legislative
bodies |
| administrative manager a
manager who is not associated with any
specific functional area but who provides
overall administrative guidance and leadership |
| Advance Against Documents
(AAD): A loan made on the security of
the actual documents covering a shipment. |
| Advance payment: Trading
method in which the buyer pays for the
goods before they are dispatched. This
is used where the buyer is of unknown
credit worthiness and is unable to obtain
a letter of credit. This is also used
as a matter of convenience for small orders. |
| Advances. Funds made
available to another party. In the case
of a loan, it's the disbursement of funds
under a note. In tax parlance it often
means something between a formalized loan
and equity. For example, a shareholder
puts money into a corporation with the
intention of being paid back shortly. |
| adverse An audit opinion
that the financial statements as a whole
are not presented in conformity with U.S.
GAAP. |
| ADVERSE POSSESSION -
An occupation of land inconsistent with
the right of the true owner. |
| ADVERTISEMENT – A paid
public announcement appearing in the media. |
| ADVERTISING – Making
known; calling public attention to a product,
service, or company by means of paid announcements
so as to affect perception or arouse consumer
desire to make a purchase or take a particular
action. |
| advertising agency an
independent firm that plans, produces,
and places advertising for its clients |
| ADVERTISING MANAGER –
A client representative responsible for
overseeing marketing efforts related to
product, including budgeting, creative
activities and liaison with agency. |
| advertising media the
various forms of communication through
which advertising reaches its audience |
| advertising a paid,
nonpersonal message communicated to a
select audience through a mass medium |
| ADVERTORIAL – An advertisement
that resembles a newspaper editorial or
a television program but promotes a single
advertiser’s product, service, or point
of view. |
| Adviory Capacity: Used
to indicate that a shipper's agent or
agent or reprentative is not empowered
to make definitive changes or adjustments
without approval of the group or individual
represented. |
| advisory services are
a consulting service in which the CPA
develops the findings, conclusions, and
recommendations presented for client consideration
and decision making. This differs from
attestation services where the CPA expresses
a conclusion about reliability of a written
assertion that is the responsibility of
another. |
| Affidavit a declaration
in writing on oath, made before a person
legally qualified for the purpose. |
| Affiliates - Business
concerns, organizations, or individuals
that control each other or that are controlled
by a third party. Control may include
shared management or ownership; common
use of facilities, equipment, and employees;
or family interest. |
| affirmative action program a
plan designed to increase the number of
minority employees at all levels within
an organization |
| AFTER-BORN CHILD - A
child born after the execution of the
parent's will; to be distinguished from
posthumous child. |
| AGATE LINE – A measure
of advertising space, 1/14 of an inch
in depth by one column in width. Thus
there are 14 agate lines to the column
inch. At Michael J. Motto Advertising,
we precisely measure all of the classified
ads we run and pay only for the exact
size ad that runs. In this way we take
thousands of dollars in linage corrections
each month on behalf of our clients. |
| AGE GROUP – A target
audience defined by age. |
| AGENCY – A company in
the business of creating advertisements,
packaging and names for products and services,
as well as providing marketing and merchandizing
advice and general business and promotional
counsel to its clients. |
| agency shop a workplace
in which employees can choose not to join
the union but must pay dues to the union
anyway |
| agency a business relationship
in which one party, called the principal,
appoints a second party, called the agent,
to act on its behalf |
| Agent - (1) An individual
or firm that effects securities transactions
for the accounts of others. (2) A person
licensed by a state as a life insurance
agent. (3) A securities salesperson who
represents a broker-dealer or issuer when
selling or trying to sell sec |
| Agent A person authorized
by another to act on their behalf. Thus,
an agent can enter into contracts and
other such legal binding functions on
behalf of another. Usually, the corporation's
officers act as corporate agents. |
| agent a middleman that
facilitates exchanges, represents a buyer
or a seller, and often is hired permanently
on a commission basis |
| Agent: A person who is
authorized to act on behalf of another.
A corporation acts only through its agents,
whether they are directors, employees,
or officers. |
| Agents. Middlemen that
provide a risk-free procurement function
by not taking title to the merchandise
they buy or sell for their customers. |
| aggregate (aggregated)
Constituting the whole. Aggregate expenses
include expenses of all divisions combined
for the entire year. |
| Aggregate Par Value Aggregate
par value is the par value multiplied
by the number of authorized shares. This
amount is important in determining initial
fees and annual franchise taxes in many
states. |
| Aggregation. The combination
of several business operations into a
larger unit. Primarily used to combine
passive trade or business undertakings
into one or more activities in order to
determine whether a taxpayer is a material
participant. |
| Aging of Accounts Receivable.
A way to estimate bad debts by analyzing
individual accounts receivable according
to the length of time they have been outstanding.
For example, outstanding accounts may
be split into those 30 days or less outstanding,
60 days or less outstanding, etc. The
analysis includes arriving at the balance
for all the accounts in a group. |
| Aging Schedule: A schedule
showing the length of time an invoice
has been outstanding or held. Aging schedules
are normally created for Accounts Payable
and Accounts Receivable. For example,
an aging schedule for accounts receivable
can show how many days an invoice has
been outstanding. Aging schedules can
also be created for inventory. |
| agreed-upon procedures
An engagement where the client specifies
procedures and the accountant agrees to
perform those procedures. An accountant
may accept an engagement limited to applying
agreed-upon procedures to financial statement
elements, where the scope of the engagement
is not sufficient to express an opinion
on the elements, if the users assume responsibility
for sufficiency of the procedures, and
use of the report is restricted to specified
users. |
| aicpa American Institute
of Certified Public Accountants. The professional
organization of CPAs in the U.S. It is
a private organization of CPAs, not an
arm of the government. Each state issues
CPA certificates, not the AICPA. Since
each state makes its own laws, each state
could prepare and grade their own CPA
examination. However, each state uses
the uniform CPA exam prepared and graded
by the AICPA. |
| Air way bill: Transport
document used in air freight. Serves as
a receipt for the goods and evidence of
carriage contract. This is not a document
of title and so is not needed by the consignee
in order to claim the goods from the carrier. |
| AIRPLANE BANNER – A flag
or banner bearing an advertisement that
trails behind a low-flying airplane. |
| ALERT: Notification that
a disaster situation has occurred - stand
by for possible activation of disaster
recovery plan. |
| alien corporation a
corporation chartered by a foreign government
and conducting business in the United
States |
| All risks insurance:
Insurance covering risks set out in the
Institute of London Underwriters Cargo
Clauses A. Covers fire, theft, loss at
sea, damage during loading, transhipment
and discharge but NOT strikes, riots,
civil commotion or war piracy. |
| Allocation Base. An approach
for assigning a given cost to two or more
departments of a business. |
| allocation Distribution
according to a plan. Depreciation, amortization,
and depletion are methods to allocate
a cost to periods benefited. |
| All-or-None Bid. A bid
for a number of different items in which
the bidder will not accept a partial award,
but only an award for all the items, services,
etc. included in the bid. |
| allowance for bad debt
— The amount of debt a company expects
not to collect. This is subtracted from
what the company is owed for goods it
sold on credit (accounts receivable),
so the balance sheet better reflects the
company’s true economic health. |
| allowance for doubtful
accounts A contra asset account with a
credit balance used to reduce the carrying
amount of accounts receivable to net realizable
value. The allowance balance is the estimated
total of uncollectible accounts included
in accounts receivable. |
| allowance for sampling
risk The difference between a sample estimate
and the projected population characteristic
at a specified sampling risk. This allowance
is also the difference between the expected
error rate and the tolerable deviation
rate. |
| Alongside: The side of
a ship. Goods to be delivered "alongside"
are to be placed on the dock or taken
next to the ship within reach of the transport
ship's tackle so that can be loaded aboard
the ship. |
| ALTERNATE SITE: A location,
other than the normal facility, used to
process data and/or conduct critical business
functions in the event of a disaster.
SIMILAR TERMS: Alternate Processing Facility,
Alternate Office Facility, Alternate Communication
Facility. |
| Alternative minimum tax.
An alternative tax system that says: your
tax shall not go below this level. The
alternative minimum tax works by negating
(or minimizing) the effects of tax preferences
or loopholes. |
| Amendment: Variation
in the terms or conditions of any document.
In the case of Letters of credit, an amendment
to a letter of credit is issued by the
Issuing bank under the direction of the
applicant, and is advised to the Advising
bank, following the same route as the
original LC. |
| american national standards
institute (ansi) Without some semblance
of a standardized language, computers
could not easily communicate with each
other. ANSI (pronounced "antsy") is the
U.S.-based organization dedicated to developing
industrywide standards for technology.
ANSI works closely with other entities,
such as the International Organization
for Standardization (ISO) to facilitate
the development of global standards. One
widely used ANSI standard is ASCII (American
standard code for information interchange),
the most common format for computers and
Internet text. |
| Amortise the gradual
process of writing off the cost of an
asset, or paying off a liability by means
of a sinking fund, over a period of time. |
| Amortization - (1) The
paying off of debt in regular installments
over a period of time. (2) The ratable
deduction of certain capitalized expenditures
over a specified period of time. |
| Amortization - reduction
of debt through installed payments. |
| Amortization The gradual
reduction of debt by periodic payment
sufficient to pay current interest and
to eliminate the principal at maturity.
This is also the term used for gradual
reduction/writing off over a period of
time in the book value of fixed or intangible
assets, deferred charges and prepaid expenses,
bond discount and bond premium, etc. |
| Amortization The reduction
in the value of an intangible asset (a
copyright, a patent, an address list,
or other similar property) taken as an
expense (written off) in each accounting
period. (Compare to loan amortization,
defined below.) |
| Amortization. The write-off
of an amount spent for certain capital
assets, similar to depreciation. This
tax meaning is different from the common
meaning of the term that describes, for
example, payment schedules of loans. |
| Amortization. This is
similar to straight-line depreciation,
allowing a business or individual to write
off an expenditure over a number of years.
Amortization generally applies to intangible
assets. For example, you purchase a business
consisting of a machine with a fair market
value of $10,000 and goodwill of $15,000.
You can't expense (write off) the cost
in the year acquired, but you can depreciate
the machine using any of several methods,
including one that provides greater deductions
in the early years. The goodwill can only
be amortized over 15 years using a straight-line
method, or $1,000 per year. |
| Amortization: Repayment
of a loan in installments of principal
and interest, rather than interest-only
payments. |
| Amortization: The gradual
and periodic reduction of an amount over
time. It can apply to either the periodic
write-down of an asset (see depreciation)
or a gradual extinguishment of a debt
(payments reducing loan principal). |
| Amortize. Process of
rationally and systematically allocating
cost of an asset over the expected life
of the asset. |
| analytic process a process
in operations management in which raw
materials are broken into different component
parts |
| analytical procedure
A comparison of financial statement amounts
with the auditor's expectation. An example
is the comparison of actual interest expense
for the year (a financial statement amount)
with an estimate of what that interest
expense should be. The estimate can be
found by multiplying a reasonable interest
rate times the average balance of interest
bearing debt outstanding during the year
(the auditor's expectation). If actual
interest expense differs significantly
from the expectation the auditor explains
the difference in the working papers. |
| analyze Identify and
classify items for further study. |
| angel investors Wealthy
individuals who choose to put substantial
sums of their own money into startup companies.
They are specifically not operating under
the auspices of a venture capital fund.
While their investments tend to be less
than $1 million per venture, angel investors
account for more than $20 billion annually
in seed money, providing an important
development layer for new technology and
market ideas that might not otherwise
get out of the gate. |
| Annual Meeting of Shareholders
Nearly all states require a corporation
to hold an annual meeting of shareholders
at which time directors are elected and
other corporate issues are voted on. |
| Annual Percentage Rate
(APR): Cost of credit expressed as a yearly
rate . |
| Annual Percentage Rate.
A credit arrangement term that applies
to the relative cost of credit stated
as an annual percentage, i.e. the annual
cost of credit. |
| Annual Report: A report
prepared by a business entity at the end
of its calendar or fiscal year. It presents
a company's financial position and operating
results for use by interested parties,
including potential investors, creditors,
stockholders, and employees. |
| Annuity. The dictionary
definition is a contract issued by an
insurance company that pays an annuitant
an amount periodically for a certain time
for the remainder of his life. Common
usage has expanded that definition to
the point where you must dig deeper to
understand the meaning. Variations include
a deferred annuity where you make payments
into a fund over a period of years (where
tax on the fund's income is deferred),
an immediate annuity (the original definition)
or many other plans where a series of
payments, either into or out of the fund,
are involved. |
| anticipated Expected. |
| APEC: Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation, an organization of countries
in Asia and elsewhere dedicated to increasing
international trade. |
| Apostille Is a method
of certifying a document for use in another
country pursuant to the 1961 Hague Convention.
With this certification by apostille,
a document is entitled to recognition
in the country of intended use, and no
certification or legalization by the embassy
or consulate of the foreign country where
the document is to be used is required.
With our international package, we include
an apostilled copy of the certificate
of incorporation for use in your desired
country. |
| appellate court a court
that hears cases appealed from lower courts |
| applet A software program
(or application) within a larger program
that is designed for a specific task,
such as the Java program embedded in Web
browsers. Unlike applications, applets
cannot be executed directly from the operating
system. Well-designed applets can be executed
from many different applications. This
cross-platform compatibility, their small
file size, and the fact that they cannot
be used to gain access to a user's hard
drive make applets ideal for small Internet
applications accessible from a browser.
See browser. |
| Applicable Federal Rates
(AFRs). Minimum interest rates that must
be charged on various transactions that
involve payments over a number of years.
If the parties to a transaction do not
adhere to these rates, the IRS will impute
the interest. (See "Imputed interest.") |
| Applicant: Buyer/importer
in a letter of credit transaction, who
applies to the Issuing Bank for a letter
of credit in favor of the seller (beneficiary).
Other terms for this are, the accountee
or accreditor. |
| application control Programmed
procedure in application software designed
to ensure completeness and accuracy of
information. |