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  2. Stock appreciation right - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_Appreciation_Right

    Stock appreciation rights (SARs) and phantom stock are very similar plans. Both essentially are cash bonus plans, although some plans pay out the benefits in the form of shares. SARs typically provide the employee with a cash payment based on the increase in the value of a stated number of shares over a specific period of time.

  3. South African Revenue Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_Revenue_Service

    The Union of South Africa came into existence on 31 May 1910, uniting the Cape Colony, Transvaal Colony, Colony of Natal, and Orange River Colony.Three months later, on 9 August, the Governor-General, Herbert Gladstone, retroactively appointed Joseph Clerc Sheridan, Esq., as the acting Commissioner for Inland Revenue with effect from 1 July 1910. [15]

  4. SARS eFiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sars_efiling

    SARS eFiling is the South African governments official online tax returns submission portal for the South African Revenue Service (SARS). SARS eFiling provides free services to individual taxpayers, trusts, companies and tax practitioners to submit tax returns, submit declarations and make relevant payments in an online environment.

  5. Taxation in South Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_South_Africa

    Income tax in South Africa was first introduced in 1914 with the introduction of the Income Tax Act No 28, an act that had its origins in the New South Wales Act of 1895. The act has gone through numerous amendments with the act presently in force is the Income Tax Act No 58 of 1962 which contains provisions for four different types of income tax.

  6. Certificate revocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_revocation

    Certificate revocation is "an important tool" for dealing with attacks and accidental compromises. RFC 9325 places a normative requirement on TLS implementations to have some means of distrusting certificates. [9] Without revocation, an attacker can use a compromised certificate to impersonate its owner until expiry. [4]

  7. Bearer instrument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bearer_instrument

    This means that the actual owner of this certificate is the person who has this certificate. The company's constituent documents, as a rule, provide for the procedure for signing a certificate. In most offshore jurisdictions, share certificates must be signed by the director or other authorized person of the company.

  8. Certification Review item - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certification_Review_item

    Certification Review Item (CRI) is a document describing an item that requires disposition prior to the issuance of Type Certificate (TC), change to TC approval or Supplemental Type Certificate (STC) by European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA).

  9. Pass-through certificate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pass-through_certificate

    An equipment trust certificate is a specific case. In creating such a pass-through structure, the underlying assets are "bundled" into a pass-through security [2] (also known as a "pay-through security"), where the principal and interest payments are "passed through" to certificate holders.