Term
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Definition
Accepting the risk of starting and running a business. |
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Term
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Definition
A group of experienced people from different areas of business who join together to form managerial team with the skills needed to develop, make, and market a new product. |
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Definition
entrepreneurs willing to accept the risk of starting and managing the type of business that remains small, lets them do the kind of work they want to do, and offers them a balanced lifestyle. |
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Definition
An internet-based marketing strategy in which a business rewards individuals or other businesses for each visitor or customer the affiliate sends to its web site. |
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Definition
Creative people who work as entrepreneurs within corporations. |
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Definition
Specific geographic areas to which governments try to attract private business investment by offering lower taxes and other government support. |
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Term
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Definition
Centers that offer new business low-cost offices with basic business services. |
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Term
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Definition
A business that is independently owned and operated, is not dominant in its field of operation, and meets certain standards of size in terms of employees or annual receipts. |
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Term
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Definition
A detailed written statement that describes the nature of the business, the target market, the advantages the business will have in relation to competition, and the resources and qualifications of the owners. |
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Definition
Individuals or companies that invest in new businesses in exchange for partial ownership of those businesses. |
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Term
Small Business Administration
(SBA) |
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Definition
A U.S. government agency that advises and assists small businesses by providing management training and financial advice and loans. |
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Term
Small Business Investment Company Program
(SBIC) |
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Definition
A program through which private investment companies licensed by the Small Business Administration lend money to small businesses. |
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Term
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Definition
People with unsatisfied wants and needs who have both the resources and willingness to buy. |
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Term
Service Corps of Retired Executives
(SCORE) |
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Definition
An SBA office with volunteers from industry, trade associations, and education who counsel small businesses at no cost. |
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Term
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Definition
The creation of finished goods and services using the factors of production: land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship, and knowledge. |
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Term
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Definition
The term used to describe all the activities managers do to help their firms create goods. |
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Term
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Definition
A specialized area in management that converts or transforms resources into goods and services. |
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Term
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Definition
The value producers add to materials in the creation of finished goods and services. |
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Term
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Definition
The part of the production process that physically or chemically changes materials. |
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Term
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Definition
That part of production process that puts together components. |
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Term
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Definition
A production process in which long production runs turn out finished goods over time. |
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Term
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Definition
A production process in which the production run is short and the machines are changed frequently to make different products. |
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Term
computer-aided design
(CAD) |
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Definition
The use of computers in the design of products. |
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Term
computer-aided manufacturing
(CAM) |
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Definition
The use of computers in the manufacturing of products. |
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Term
computer-intergrated manufacturing
(CIM) |
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Definition
The uniting of computer-aided design with computer-aided manufacturing. |
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Term
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Definition
Designing machines to do multiple tasks so that they can produce a variety of products. |
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Term
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Definition
The production of goods using less of everything compared to mass production. |
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Term
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Definition
Tailoring products to meet the needs of individual customers. |
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Term
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Definition
The process of selecting a geographic location for a company's operations. |
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Term
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Definition
Working from home via computer and modem. |
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Term
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Definition
The physical arrangement of resources in the production process. |
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Term
material requirement planning
(MRP) |
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Definition
A computer-based operations management system that uses sales forecasts to make sure that needed parts and materials are available at the right time and place. |
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Term
enterprise resource planning
(ERP) |
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Definition
A newer version of materials requirement planning (MRP) that combines the computerized functions of all the divisions and subsidiaries of the firm-such as finance, human resources, and other fulfillment-into a single integrated software program that uses a single database. |
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Term
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Definition
The function in a firm that searches for high-quality material resources, finds the best suppliers, and negotiates the best price for goods and services. |
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Term
just-in-time inventory control
(JIT) |
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Definition
A production process in which a minimum of inventory is kept on the premises and parts, supplies, and other needs are delivered just in time to go on the assembly line. |
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Term
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Definition
Consistently producing what the customer wants while reducing errors before and after delivery to the customer. |
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Term
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Definition
A quality measure that allows only 3.4 defects per million opportunities. |
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Term
statistical quality control
(SQC) |
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Definition
The process some managers use to continually monitor all phases of the production process to assure that quality is being built into the product from the beginning. |
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Term
statistical process control
(SPC) |
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Definition
The process of testing statistical samples of product samples of product components at each stage of the production process and plotting those results on a graph. Any variances from quality standards are recognized and can be corrected if beyond the test standards. |
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Term
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Definition
The common name given to quality management and assurance standards. |
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Term
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Definition
A collection of the best practices for managing an organization's impact on the environment. |
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Term
program evaluation and review technique
(PERT) |
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Definition
A method for analyzing the tasks involved in completing a given project, estimating the time needed to complete each task, and identifying the minimum time needed to complete the total project. |
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Term
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Definition
Bar graph showing production managers what projects are being worked on and what stage they are in at any given time. |
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Term
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Definition
In a PERT network, the sequence of tasks that takes the longest time to complete |
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Term
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Definition
The assessment of a firm's financial condition and interpretations of financial ratios developed from the firm's financial statements. |
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Term
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Definition
The recording,classifying, summarizing and interpreting of financial events and transactions to provide management and other interested parties the information they need to make good decisions. |
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Term
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Definition
Accounting used to provide information and analyses to managers inside the organization to assist them in decision making. |
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Term
Certified Management Accountant (CMA) |
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Definition
A professional accountant who has met certain educational and experience requirements, passed a qualifying exam, and been certified by the Insistute of Certified Management Accountants |
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Term
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Definition
Accounting information and analyses preppared for people outside the organization |
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Term
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Definition
A yearly statement of the financial condition, progress, and expectations of an organization |
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Term
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Definition
An accountant who works for a single firm, government agency, or nonprofit organization. |
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Term
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Definition
An accountant who provides accounting services to individuals or businesses on a fee basis. |
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Term
Certified Public Accountant (CPA) |
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Definition
An accountant who passes a series of examiniations established by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) |
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Term
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Definition
The job of reviewing and evaluating information used to prepare a companys financial statements. |
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Term
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Definition
An evaluation and unbiased opinion about the accuracy of a companys financial statements. |
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Term
Certified Internal Auditor (CIA) |
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Definition
An accountant who has a bachelor's degree and two years of expierence in internal auditing, and who has passed an exam administered by the Institute of Internal Auditors |
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Term
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Definition
An accountant trained in tax law and responsible for preparing tax returns or developing tax strategies |
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Term
government and not-for-profit accounting |
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Definition
Accounting system for organizations whose purpose is not generating a profit but serving ratepayers, taxpayers, and others according to a duly approved budget. |
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Term
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Definition
A six-step procedure that results in the preparation and analysis of the major financial statements. |
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Term
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Definition
The recording of busniess transactions |
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Term
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Definition
The record book or computer program where accounting data are first entered |
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Term
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Definition
The practice of writing every business transaction in two places |
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Term
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Definition
A specialized accounting book or computer program in which information from accounting journals is accumulated into specific categories and posted so that managers can find all the information about one account in the same place. |
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Term
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Definition
A summary of all the financial data in the account ledgers that ensures the figures are correct and balanced |
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Term
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Definition
A summary of all the transactions that have occured over a particular period |
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Term
Fundamental Accounting Equation |
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Definition
Assets=Liabilities+Owners Equit; this is the basis for the balance sheet |
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Term
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Definition
Financial Statement that reports a firms financial condition at a specific time and is composed of 3 major accounts: aassests, liabilites, and owners equity. |
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Term
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Definition
Economic resources( things of value ) owned by a firm. |
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Term
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Definition
The ease with which an assest can be converted into cash. |
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Term
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Definition
Items that can or will be converted into cash within 1 year. |
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Term
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Definition
Long-term assests (patents, trademarks,copyrights) that have no real physical form but do have value |
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Term
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Definition
Assets that are relatively permanent, such as land, buildings, and equipment |
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Term
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Definition
What the business owes to others (debt) |
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Term
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Definition
Current liabilities are bills the company owes to others for merchandise or services purchased on credit but not yet paid for |
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Term
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Definition
Short-term or long-term liabilities that a business promises to repay by a certain date |
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Term
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Definition
Long-term liabilites that represent money lent to the firm that must be paid back. |
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Term
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Definition
The amount of the business that belongs to the owners minus any liabilities owed by the business. |
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Term
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Definition
The accumulated earnings from a firms profitable operations that were reinvested in the bussiness and not paid out to stockholders in dividends. |
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Term
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Definition
The financial statement that shows a firms profit after costs, expenses, and taxes; it summarizes all of the resources that have come into the firm (revenue), all the resources that have left the firm, and the resulting net income |
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Term
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Definition
Revenue left over after all costs and expenses, including taxes, are paid. |
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Term
Costs of goods sold(or cost of goods manufactured) |
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Definition
A measure of the cost of merchandise sold or cost of raw materials and supplies used for producing items for resale |
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Term
Gross Profit (or gross margin) |
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Definition
How much a firm earned by buying (or making) and selling merchandise. |
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Term
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Definition
Costs involved in operating a business, such as rent, utilities and salaries . |
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Term
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Definition
The system write-off of the cost of a tangible assest over its estimated useful life |
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Term
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Definition
Financial Statement that reports cash receipts and disbursements related to a firms three major activities: operations, investments, and financing |
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Term
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Definition
The difference between cash coming in and cash going out of a business |
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Term
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Definition
The assesment of a firms financial condition using calculations and interpretations of financial ratios developed from the firms financial statements |
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Term
Initial public offering (IPO) |
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Definition
The first public offering of a corporations stock |
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Term
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Definition
Specialists who assist in the issue and sale of new securities |
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Term
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Definition
Large organizations- such as pension funds, mutual funds, and insurance companies- that invest their own funds or the funds of others |
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Term
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Definition
An organization whose members can buy and sell (exchange) securities for companies and individual investors |
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Term
over-the-counter (OTC) market |
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Definition
Exchange that provides a means to trade stocks not listed on the national exchanges |
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Term
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Definition
A nationwide electronic system that links dealers across the nation so that they can buy and sell securities electronically |
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Term
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) |
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Definition
Federal agency that has responsibility for regulating the various stock exchanges |
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Term
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Definition
A condensed version of economic and financial information that a company must file with the SEC before issuing stock; Â must be sent to prosoective investors. |
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Term
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Definition
Shares of ownership in a company |
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Term
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Definition
Evidence of stock ownership that specifies the name of the company, the number of shares it represents, and the type of stock being issued. |
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Term
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Definition
Part of a firms profits that the firm may distribute to stockholders as either cash payments of additional shares of stock |
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Term
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Definition
The most basic form of ownership in a firm; it confers voting rights and the right to share in the firms profits through dividends, if approved by the firms board of directors |
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Term
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Definition
Stock that gives its owners preference in the payment of dividends and an earlier claim on assets than common stock holders if the company is forced out of business and its assests sold |
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Term
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Definition
A corporate certificate indicating that a person has lent money to a firm (or a government) |
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Term
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Definition
The exact date the issuer of a bond must pay the prinicpal to the bondholder |
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Term
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Definition
The payment the issuer of the bond makes to the bondholders for use of the borrowed money |
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Term
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Definition
Bonds, that are unsecured (ie- not backed by any collateral) |
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Term
Secure Bonds (Mortgage Bonds) |
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Definition
Bonds that are backed by collateral |
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Term
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Definition
A reserve account in which the issuer of a bond periodically retires some part of the bond principal prior to maturity so that enough capital will be accumulated by the maturity date to pay off the bond |
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Term
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Definition
A registered representative who works as a market intermediary to buy and sell securites for clients. |
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Term
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Definition
Buying several different investment alternatives to spread the risk of investing |
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Term
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Definition
The positive difference between the purchase price of a stock and its sale price |
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Term
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Definition
An action by a company that gives stockholders two or more shares of stock for each one they own |
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Term
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Definition
Purchasing stocks by borrowing some of the purchase cost from the brokerage firm |
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Term
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Definition
High-risk, high-interest bonds |
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Term
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Definition
An organization that buys stocks and bonds and then sells shares in those securities to the public |
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Term
exchange-traded funds (ETFs) |
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Definition
Collections of stocks and bonds that are traded on exchanges but are traded more like individual sotcks than like mutual funds |
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Term
Dow Jones Industrial Average (the Dow) |
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Definition
The average cost of 30 selected industrial stocks, used to give an indication of the direction (up or down) of the stock market over time. |
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Term
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Definition
Giving instructions to computers to automatically sell if the price of a stock dips to a certain point to avoid potential losses. |
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Term
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Definition
Security market that handles the sale of new securities |
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Term
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Definition
Security market that handles the trading of sold securities between investors, with the proceeds of the sale going to the investor selling the stock, not the corporation whose stock is sold |
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Term
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Definition
Investment banking firm buys the entire stock or bond issue at an agreed-on discount, which can be quite sizable, and then sells the issue to private or institutional investors at full price |
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Term
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Definition
Dollar ammount assigned to each share of stock by the corporations charter |
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Term
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Definition
Stock that can be required that the stockholder has to sell their shares back to the corporation |
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Term
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Definition
if one or more dividends are not paid when promised to prefered stockholders, they accumulate and the corporation must pay them later before it can distribute any common stock dividends |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
permits the bond issuer to pay off the principal before its maturity date |
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Term
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Definition
investors can convert shares of common stock in the issuing company |
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Term
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Definition
The chance an investment will be worth less at some future time than its worth now |
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Term
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Definition
The expected rate of return on an investment, such as an interest or dividends usually over a period of one year |
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Term
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Definition
The length of time your money is committed to an investment |
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Term
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Definition
How quickly you can get back your invested funds if you want or need them |
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Term
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Definition
How the investment will affect your tax situation |
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Term
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Definition
Belief that stock prices are going to rise; they buy stock in anticipation of the increase |
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Term
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Definition
belief that stock prices will decline and sell their stock in anticipation of falling prices |
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Term
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Definition
Stocks issued by higher-quality companies that pay regular dividends and generally expierence consistent stock price appreciation |
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Term
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Definition
Stocks of corporations in emerging fields whose earnings are expected to grow at a faster rate then other stocks. Riskier stocks that offer the potential for higher returns. |
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Term
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Definition
Stocks of public utilities that offer investors a high dividend yield that generally keeps pace with inflation. |
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Term
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Definition
risky investments in stock of companies that compete in high-risk industries (ie-oil companies) |
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Term
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Definition
purchasing 100 shares at a time |
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Term
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Definition
purchasing fewer than 100 shares at a time |
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Term
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Definition
Bonds that do not have features that make it attractive to investors may have to sell bonds at a? |
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Term
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Definition
Bonds that have features that make it attractive to investors could be sold at a? |
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Term
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Definition
charges investors a comission to buy or sell its shares |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
mutual funds that accept the investments of any interested investors |
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Term
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Definition
limit the number of shares; once the fund reaches its target number, no new investors can buy into the fund |
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Term
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Definition
caused when too many investors drive the price of something unrealistcally high |
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Term
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Definition
The function in a business that acquires funds for the firm and manages thoose funds within the firm |
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Term
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Definition
The job of managing a firms resources so it can meet its goals and objectives |
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Term
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Definition
Managers who examine financial data prepared by accountants and reccomend strategies for improving the financial performance of the firm |
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Term
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Definition
Forecast that predicts revenues, costs, and expenses for a period of one year or less |
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Term
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Definition
Forecast that predicts the cash inflows and outflows in future periods, usually months or quarters |
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Term
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Definition
Forecast that predicts revenues, costs and expenses for a period longer than 1 year, and sometimes as far as 5 or 10 years into the future |
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Term
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Definition
A financial plan that sets forth managements expectations, and, on the basis of those expectations, allocates the use of specific resources throughout the firm |
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Term
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Definition
A budget that highlights a firms spending plans for major assest purchases that often require large sums of money |
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Term
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Definition
A budget that estimates cash inflows and outflows during a particular period like a month or a quarter |
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Term
Operating (or master) budget |
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Definition
The budget that ties together the firms other budgets and summarizes its proposed financial activities |
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Term
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Definition
A process in which a firm periodically compares its actual revenues, costs and expenses with a budget |
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Term
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Definition
Major investments in either tangiable long-term assests such as land, buildings, and equipment or intangible assests such as patents, trademarks and copyrights |
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Term
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Definition
Funds raised through various forms of borrowing that must be repaid |
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Term
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Definition
Money raised from within the firm, from operations or through the sale of ownership in the firm (stock) |
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Term
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Definition
Funds needed for a year or less |
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Term
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Definition
Funds needed for more than a year (usually 2 to 10) |
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Term
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Definition
The practice of buying goods and services now and paying for them later. |
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Term
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Definition
A written contract with a promise to pay a supplier a specific sum of money at a definite time |
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Term
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Definition
A loan backed by collateral, something valuable such as property |
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Term
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Definition
A loan that doesnt require any collateral |
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Term
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Definition
A given amount of unsecured short-term funds a bank will lend to a business, provided the funds are readily available |
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Term
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Definition
A line of credit thats guaranteed but usally comes with a fee |
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Term
Commercial Finance Companies |
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Definition
Organizations that make short-term loans to borrowers who offer tangible assets as collateral |
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Term
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Definition
The process of selling accounts recievable for cash |
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Term
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Definition
Unsecured promissory notes of 100,000$ and up that mature(come due) in 270 days or less |
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Term
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Definition
A promissory note that requires the borrower to repay the loan in specified installments. |
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Term
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Definition
The principle that the greater the risk a lender takes in making a loan, the hight the interest rate required. |
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Term
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Definition
The terms of agreement in a bond issue |
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Term
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Definition
A bond with some form of collateral |
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Term
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Definition
A bond backed by only the reputation of the issuer; also called a debenture bond |
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Term
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Definition
Money that is invested in new or emerging companies that are perceived as having great profit potential |
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Term
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Definition
Raising needed funds through borrowing to increase a firms rate of return |
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Term
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Definition
The rate of return a company must earn in order to meet the demands of its lenders and expectations of its equity holders |
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