Finance Definitions
Finance Definitions
historical cost principleThe concept that many transactions and events are
to be measured and reported at acquisition cost
internal auditorA person within an organization who reviews and monitors the
controls, procedures, and information of the organization
accountA record that is kept for each asset, liability, equity, revenue,
expense, and dividend component of an entity
trial balanceA listing of account balances from the ledger, used to test the
equality of debits and credits
adjusted trial balanceA trial balance prepared after adjusting entries have
been prepared and posted to the ledger
adjusting processTo analyze account balances and update them at the end
of an accounting period to reflect the correct measure of revenues and
expenses
modified cash basisLike the cash basis, except that certain large
expenditures for durable assets may be recorded as assets initially
current assetsAssets that will be converted into cash or consumed within one
year or the operating cycle, whichever is longer
full disclosure principleAll relevant facts that would influence investors' and
creditors' judgments about the company are disclosed in the financial
statements or related notes
long-term liabilitiesAny obligation that is not current, and include bank loans,
mortgage notes, and the like
nominal accountsAccounts that will be reset to a zero balance with each new
accounting period; revenue, expense, and dividend accounts (also called
"temporary" accounts)
operating cycleThe period of time it takes to convert cash back into cash (i.e.,
purchase inventory, sell the inventory on account, and collect the receivable)
property, plant, and equipmentAssets with long lives that will be used in an
entity's production processes; land, buildings, and equipment
interestThe charge imposed on the borrower of funds for the use of money
maturity dateThe date on which a note and related interest are due to be
paid
contingent liabilitiesEvents that may or may not give rise to an actual liability
because the outcome is uncertain; examples include lawsuits, environmental
damage issues, and so forth
defined benefit planA type of pension plan where the benefits are a function
of years of service, pay, and age; the ultimate employer cost is not known in
advance
defined contribution planA type of pension plan where the benefits are based
on amounts in trust for the benefit of the employee; employer contributions
are usually a fixed percentage of pay
employeeA person who works for a specific business and
whose activities are directed by that business
gross payAlso known as gross earnings; this it is the total amount earned by
an employee before any deductions
income taxesTaxes that are based on the amount income; for employees
such amounts must be withheld by employers and remitted to the
government
net payAlso known as net earnings; this is the gross pay less all applicable
deductions ("take home pay")
warranty liabilityA liability that is recorded for the future costs of claims that
are anticipated because of product warranty agreements
stock splitA corporate action to increase the number of shares and reduce
the par per share by a stipulated ratio (e.g., 2 for 1)
total paid-in capitalThe sum of legal capital plus paid-in capital in
excess of par
budgetA planning tool that outlines the financial plans for an organization;
there are various types of budgets -- operating, capital, and financial
direct materialThe costs of all materials that are an integral part of a finished
product and that have a physical presence that is readily traced to that
finished product
job costing methodA costing approach whereby actual labor and material is
tracked for each job or product
prime costProduct costs that are direct in nature; direct materials and direct
labor
fixed costA total cost that is the same regardless of volume; total cost is
constant and per unit cost decreases with volume increases
high-low methodA simple means for separating costs into fixed and variable
components, based upon the difference between costs at the highest and
lowest observed levels of activity
method of least squaresA complex means for separating costs into fixed and
variable components, based upon minimising the variances between all
observations and the resulting assumed cost function
mixed costsA cost that has both fixed and variable components
relevant rangeThe level of activity for which assumptions underlying CVP are
expected to hold true
variable costA per unit cost that is the same regardless of volume;
total variable cost increases with volume increases
Uncollectible –