ACID-TEST
RATIO
A
meaure of the ability of a business to meet its short-term
commitments. It is calculated by dividing current assets,
excluding stock, by current liabilities. Current assets
are trade debtors (amounts due from customers), cash
balances, and short-term investments which can easily
be convertered into cash. Current liabilities include
amounts due to suppliers, bank overdrafts and amounts
due for unpaid expenses such as telephone bills and
PAYE.
ACCOUNTING EQUATION
This states that total
assets equal total liabilities.
ACCRUALS OR ACCRUED
CHARGES
Expenses for the current
accounting period which have not yet been paid. They
are sometimes referred to as provisions. Accrued income
refers to cash received in advance for a service not
yet provided to the customer.
ASSETS
The economic resources
of a business such as buildings, equipment, trade debtors
and cash balances.
ASSET TURNOVER
This is a ratio which
measures the effectiveness with which a business uses
its assets in relation to the level of income or sales,
(turnover), which they generate. It is calculated by
dividing income by capital employed.
ASSOCIATED OR RELATED
COMPANY
A company over which another
has significant influence. A company will be presumed
to be an associated company if it is owned to the extent
of between 20% and 50%. Above 50% ownership it becomes
a subsidiary. Under 20% ownership it becomes a trade
investment.
BALANCE
SHEET
A statement of the financial
position of a business at a particular date showing
the various categories of assets and how they have been
financed.
BOOK VALUE (or net
book value or written down value)
The cost of a fixed asset
such as plant and equipment less the depreciation which
has so far been accumulated.
CAPITAL
(Share Capital)
The permanent capital
contributed by the owners of a business (the shareholders),
both at the start of trading and subsequently, when
additional capital is required to finance expansion.
CAPITAL EMPLOYED
This is equal to fixed
assets plus current assets, less current liabilities.
Companies sometimes use the term "net assets"
when referring to capital employed.
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
Expenditure on fixed assets
such as plant and equipment, the cost of which is spread
over several accounting periods through the process
of depreciation. The cost of the fixed assets (less
the depreciation accumulated to date) is "capitalised"
in the balance sheet. The depreciation charged each
year is a cost in the profit and loss account.
CAPITAL GEARING
OR GEARING
The proportion of total
bank borrowings in relation to capital employed.
CAPITAL AND RESERVES
The sum of the share capital,
the share premium, the retained profit and other reserves
at the balance sheet date. Other reserves may include
"capital reserves" which arise from upward
re-valuations of assets.
CASH FLOW
The ability of a business
to generate liquid resources to meet its short-term
and long-term commitments. Cash flow is often used synonymously
with the term "funds flow".
COLLECTION PERIOD
The average length of
time that it takes for a customer to pay a sales invoice.
It is calculated by dividing trade debtors by income
(or turnover), times 365 days to give the average number
of days for which the sales invoice has been outstanding.
COST
The charge against profits
made for the use or consumption of resources during
an accounting period. It is not necessarily the same
as the cash actually spent in view of adjustments for
pre-payments and provisions.
COST OF SALES OR
COST OF GOODS SOLD
This is the cost to the
business of the products and services sold to its customers.
CREDITORS
Any person or organisation
to whom a business has a commitment apart from shareholders
(who own the business). For example, trade creditors
are suppliers of goods for which unpaid bills are outstanding.
It is a legal requirement to distinguish between short-term
creditors (due to be paid within 12 months of the balance
sheet date) called current liabilities, and long-term
creditor is taxation. Short and long-term bank borrowings
are disclosed separately.
CURRENT ASSETS
Assets such as debtors
and stocks, which can be convertered into cash within
12 months of the balance sheet date. Cash balances and
short-term investments (such as stock market investments),
are also part of current assets.
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Short-term liabilities
which have to be discharged normally within 12 months
of the balance sheet date. For example, trade creditors,
bank overdrafts and accrued charges.
CURRENT RATIO
The ratio of current assets
divided by current liabilities. It is a broad measure
of the ability of a business to meet its short-term
commitments. Current assets less current liabilities
are equal to net current assets or working capital.
DEBT
OF FINANCE DEBT
Interest bearing liabilities
such as short and long-term bank loans.
DEBT-EQUITY RATIO
The proportion of short
and long-term bank borrowings less cash balances to
the shareholders' equity or shareholders' funds.
DEFERRED INCOME
(see also accrued income)
Cash received in advance
of providing goods and services.
DEFERRED TAXATION
This is caused by timing
differences which arise when a transaction is recognised
differently for accounting purposes and tax purposes;
for example, capital expenditure, which involves the
process of depreciation for accounting purposes and
the calculation of capital or investment allowances
for tax purposes.
DEPRECIATION
The process of allocating
the cost of a fixed asset over its expected commercial
life.
DIRECT COSTS
Those costs which can
be identified with a specific activity or product. Indirect
costs are those costs which cannot be identified with
a specific activity or product.
EARNINGS
The profit after taxation
and all other charges less preference dividends and
the minority interest but before extraordinary items.
Earnings are attributable to the ordinary shareholders
who are the owners of the business.
EARNINGS PER SHARE
The profit after taxation,
and all other charges less preference dividends and
the minority interest, but before extraordinary items,
divided by the number of issued ordinary shares.
EXPENDITURE
Either (a) capital expenditure
(see separate entry) or (b) revenue expenditure like
rent, rates, salaries and wages which is charged or
"written off" to the profit and loss account
as soon as it is incurred.
EXTRAORDINARY ITEMS
Items which are both abnormal
in size and in nature. They are not expected to occur
frequently or regularly. For example, the nationalisation
of assets held abroad. There are also exceptional costs
which are abnormal in size but not in nature such as
large provisions for bad debts.
FIFO (First-in-first-out)
A method of stock valuation
under the Historical Cost convention based on the assumption
that the items remaining in stock are those which were
purchased most recently.
FIXED ASSETS
Assets used almost permanently
in the business such as property, plant and equipment.
FUNDS FLOW
Any transaction which
has or will have an effect on cash. Funds may be described
as a measure of purchasing power since access to funds
implies an ability to finance or pay for short and long-term
expenditure.
GROSS PROFIT
The difference between
income (or turnover) and the direct cost of providing
the service.
HISTORICAL COST
OR HISTORICAL COST CONVENTION
This is the traditional
way of valuing assets in a balance sheet and costs in
the profit and loss account. The criterion for valuation
is the acquisition cost.
ILLIQUID
The opposite of liquid.
INTEREST COVER
An indicator of solvency:
it is calculated by expressing profit before interest
and taxation (the operating or trading profit) as a
multiple of the net interest charge (interest payable
less interest receivable).
LIABILITY
Amounts owned by the business
to others. Total liabilities equal shareholders' funds
plus amounts due to creditors.
LIQUIDITY
The ability of a business
to meet its short-term commitments. If expansion is
too rapid, trade debtors and stocks may increase to
such an extent that creditors cannot be paid reasonably
promptly because cash flow is inadequate. This is called
over-trading.
LIQUID RESOURCES
Cash and bank balances
plus short-term investments.
MINORITY INTEREST
The capital provided by,
and earned for group shareholders who are not parent
company shareholders. Many subsidiary companies are
not fully owned by the parent company, although, the
parent company's "stake" will be more than
50%. This means that they are partly owned by "minority"
shareholders outside the group. In preparation of consolidated
or group financial statements, accountants bring in
100 per cent of all the assets, expenses, liabilities
and revenues of subsidiaries. This is because the group
fully controls the subsidiary, even if it does not fully
own it. The subsidiary is amalgamated into the rest
of the group.
OPERATING COSTS
All costs excluding interest
charges and taxation. They represent those costs most
directly under the control of line or operating management.
Income or turnover less operating costs equals operating
or trading profit.
PAR VALUE
The nominal value of a
company's shares.
PREPAYMENT
A cash payment which includes
an amount covering a subsequent accounting period. For
example, business rates paid in advance.
PROFIT
The difference between
income, (or turnover), and costs for an accounting period.
In view of the "matching" principle, it is
not the same as cash, since revenue is recognised when
goods or services are supplied (rather than when paid
for by the customer) and costs are incurred during the
time period to which they relate (rather than when they
are paid out in cash).
PROFIT AND LOSS
ACCOUNT (or Income Statement)
A summary of the income
or turnover and costs for an accounting period. The
profit and loss account is concerned with trading performance
during a given period, whereas the balance sheet is
concerned with the financial position at a particular
date.
PROFIT MARGIN
A measure of profitability.
It is defined as the profit before or after interest,
and taxation expressed as a percentage of income or
turnover.
PROVISION
An additional allowance
for a cost or charge incurred but not paid for at the
balance sheet date. It will be included as a cost in
the profit and loss account and a liability in the balance
sheet. See accruals and accrued charges.
RETAINED PROFIT
The profit for the year
after all charges and the distribution of dividends
to shareholders. The figure for retained profit in the
balance sheet will be the accumulated retained profit
since the business started to trade.
RETURN ON CAPITAL
EMPLOYED (ROCE)
Normally defined as the
profit before interest and taxation expressed as a percentage
of the capital employed. It is a basic measure of profitability.
RETURN ON SHAREHOLDERS'
EQUITY OR SHAREHOLDERS' FUNDS
The profit after all charges
and the minority interest but before extraordinary items
expressed as a percentage of shareholers' funds.
REVENUE (or income)
The same as turnover or
sales which is the invoiced value of the goods and services
provided to customers.
RIGHTS ISSUE
The sale of additional
shares by a company to its existing shareholders (in
proportion to their existing holdings), normally at
a discount to the prevailing stock market price in order
to ensure a successful issue.
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
OR SHAREHOLDERS' FUNDS
The sum of the share capital
plus share premium plus retained profit plus other reserves,
at the balance sheet date.
SHARE PREMIUM
The difference between
the issue price and the nominal or par value of a share.
SOLVENCY
The ability of a business
to meet its long-term commitments. See also the debt/equity
ratio and interest cover.
STOCK TURNOVER RATE
The average number of
times each year that stocks are "turned over"
in the course of trading activity. It is calculated
by dividing the sales or cost of sales by the average
or closing stocks.
SUBSIDIARY COMPANY
See associated company.
TRADE CREDITORS
Amounts due to suppliers
for goods and services received but not yet paid for.
They are normally a current liability and are due for
payment within 12 months for the balance sheet date.
TRADE DEBTORS
Amounts due from customers
in respect of goods and services supplied but not yet
paid for.
TRADING OR OPERATING
PROFIT
Profit after all charges
except interest and taxation.
TURNOVER
The value of goods and
services provided to customers. Revenue or sales have
the same meaning.
WORKING CAPITAL
Current assets less current
liabilities (also called net current assets).
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