enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Realization (tax) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Realization_(tax)

    Realization is generally straightforward, but there are instances at the margins in which the moment of realization can be tricky. One example of a tricky realization situation that has given rise to substantial debate is the 62nd home run ball hit by Mark McGwire. The ball was retrieved by a grounds crewman, Tim Forneris.

  3. Revenue recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revenue_recognition

    The cash or accounts receivables are received, that is, when the advances are readily convertible to cash or receivables. When such goods or services are transferred or rendered. For example: Revenues from selling inventory are recognized at the date of sale, often the date of delivery. Revenues from rendering services are recognized when ...

  4. Cash conversion cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cash_conversion_cycle

    Cashflows insufficient. The term "Cash Conversion Cycle" refers to the timespan between a firm's disbursing and collecting cash. However, the CCC cannot be directly observed in cashflows, because these are also influenced by investment and financing activities; it must be derived from Statement of Financial Position data associated with the firm's operations.

  5. Monetary-disequilibrium theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monetary-disequilibrium_theory

    Monetary disequilibrium theory is a product of the monetarist school and is mainly represented in the works of Leland Yeager and Austrian macroeconomics. The basic concepts of monetary equilibrium and disequilibrium were, however, defined in terms of an individual's demand for cash balance by Mises (1912) in his Theory of Money and Credit.

  6. Cambridge equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambridge_equation

    The Cambridge equation formally represents the Cambridge cash-balance theory, an alternative approach to the classical quantity theory of money. Both quantity theories, Cambridge and classical, attempt to express a relationship among the amount of goods produced , the price level , amounts of money, and how money moves.

  7. Haig–Simons income - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haig–Simons_income

    A cash-flow consumption tax is intended to confine the cash-flow tax burden to an individual's annual consumption and to remove nonconsumption expenses and current savings from the tax base. [9] The base is calculated by combining the year's gross receipts and savings withdrawals, and then subtracting the year's business and investment expenses ...

  8. Merton's portfolio problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merton's_portfolio_problem

    Merton's portfolio problem is a problem in continuous-time finance and in particular intertemporal portfolio choice.An investor must choose how much to consume and must allocate their wealth between stocks and a risk-free asset so as to maximize expected utility.

  9. Baumol–Tobin model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baumol–Tobin_model

    The Baumol–Tobin model is an economic model of the transactions demand for money as developed independently by William Baumol (1952) and James Tobin (1956). The theory relies on the tradeoff between the liquidity provided by holding money (the ability to carry out transactions) and the interest forgone by holding one’s assets in the form of non-interest bearing money.