Net working capital

Current assets minus current liabilities. Often simply referred to as working capital.

Similar financial terms

Safety-net return
The minimum available return that will trigger an immunization strategy in a contingent immunization strategy.

Payments netting
Reducing fund transfers between affiliates to only a netted amount. Netting can be done on a bilateral basis (between pairs of affiliates), or on a multi-lateral basis (taking all affiliates together).

Netting out
To get or bring in as a net; to clear as profit.

Netting
Reducing transfers of funds between subsidiaries or separate companies to a net amount.

Net worth
Common stockholders' equity which consists of common stock, surplus, and retained earnings.

Net salvage value
The after-tax net cash flow for terminating the project.

Net profit margin
Net income divided by sales; the amount of each sales dollar left over after all expenses have been paid.

Net present value rule
An investment is worth making if it has a positive NPV. Projects with negative NPVs should be rejected.

Net present value of future investments
The present value of the total sum of NPVs expected to result from all of the firm's future investments.

Net present value of growth opportunities
A model valuing a firm in which net present value of new investment opportunities is explicitly examined.

Net present value (NPV)
The present value of the expected future cash flows minus the cost.

Net period
The period of time between the end of the discount period and the date payment is due.

Net operating margin
The ratio of net operating income to net sales.

Net operating losses
Losses that a firm can take advantage of to reduce taxes.

Net lease
A lease arrangement under which the lessee is responsible for all property taxes, maintenance expenses, insurance, and other costs associated with keeping the asset in good working condition.

Net investment
Gross, or total, investment minus depreciation.

Net income
The company's total earnings, reflecting revenues adjusted for costs of doing business, depreciation, interest, taxes and other expenses.

Net float
Sum of disbursement float and collection float.

Net financing cost
Also called the cost of carry or, simply, carry, the difference between the cost of financing the purchase of an asset and the asset's cash yield. Positive carry means that the yield earned is greater than the financing cost; negative carry means that the financing cost exceeds the yield earned.

Net errors and omissions
In balance of payments accounting, net errors and omissions record the statistical discrepancies that arise in gathering balance of payments data.

Net change
This is the difference between a day's last trade and the previous day's last trade.

Net cash balance
Beginning cash balance plus cash receipts minus cash disbursements.

Net book value
The current book value of an asset or liability; that is, its original book value net of any accounting adjustments such as depreciation.

Net benefit to leverage factor
A linear approximation of a factor, T*, that enables one to operationalize the total impact of leverage on firm value in the capital market imperfections view of capital structure.

Net assets
The difference between total assets on the one hand and current liabilities and noncapitalized longterm liabilities on the other hand.

Net asset value (NAV)
The value of a fund's investments. For a mutual fund, the net asset value per share usually represents the fund's market price, subject to a possible sales or redemption charge. For a closed end fund, the market price may vary significantly from the net asset value.

Net advantage to merging
The difference in total post- and pre-merger market value minus the cost of the merger.

Net advantage to leasing
The net present value of entering into a lease financing arrangement rather than borrowing the necessary funds and buying the asset.

Net advantage of refunding
The net present value of the savings from a refunding.

Net adjusted present value
The adjusted present value minus the initial cost of an investment.

Monetary / non-monetary method
Under this translation method, monetary items (e.g. cash, accounts payable and receivable, and long-term debt) are translated at the current rate while non-monetary items (e.g. inventory, fixed assets, and long-term investments) are translated at historical rates.

Monetary policy
Actions taken by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to influence the money supply or interest rates.

Monetary gold
Gold held by governmental authorities as a financial asset.

Cabinet security
A stock or bond listed on a major exchange with low daily traded volume.

Monetary neutrality
A proposition that in the long run, a percentage rise in the money supply is matched by the same percentage rise in the price level, leaving unchanged the real money supply and all other economic variables such as interest rates.

This theory, a core belief of classical economics, was first put forward in the 18th century by David Hume. He set out the classical dichotomy that economic variables come in two varieties, nominal and real, and that the things that influence nominal variables ...

Net interest margin (NIM)
The difference between interest income and interest expense as a percentage of assets.

Net national product
The technical term for national income, it is GNP minus capital consumption.

High Net Worth (HNW) Person
An individual with more than $1,000,000 in liquid assets to manage.

Working capital ratio
Working capital expressed as a percentage of sales.

Working capital management
The management of current assets and current liabilities to maximize short-term liquidity.

Working capital
Defined as the difference in current assets and current liabilities (excluding short-term debt). Current assets may or may not include cash and cash equivalents, depending on the company.

Capital stock
The value of an outstanding share of stock at the time it was issued

Capitalization
The combined sources of capital, consisting of dept capital (liabilities) and equity capital (capital stock and retained earnings).

Weighted average cost of capital
The weighted average cost of capital (WACC) is the expected return on a portfolio of all the firm's securities when debt, equity and tax shields are taken into account. Used as a hurdle rate for capital investment.

Venture capital
An investment in a start-up business that is perceived to have excellent growth prospects but does not have access to capital markets. Type of financing sought by early-stage companies seeking to grow rapidly.

Static theory of capital structure
Theory that the firm's capital structure is determined by a trade-off of the value of tax shields against the costs of bankruptcy.

Soft Capital Rationing
Capital rationing that under certain circumstances can be violated or even viewed as made up of targets rather than absolute constraints.

Real capital
Wealth that can be represented in financial terms, such as savings account balances, financial securities, and real estate.

Pro forma capital structure analysis
A method of analyzing the impact of alternative capital structure choices on a firm's credit statistics and reported financial results, especially to determine whether the firm will be able to use projected tax shield benefits fully.

Planned capital expenditure program
Capital expenditure program as outlined in the corporate financial plan.

Pie model of capital structure
A model of the debt/equity ratio of the firms, graphically depicted in slices of a pie that represent the value of the firm in the capital markets.

Personal tax view (of capital structure)
The argument that the difference in personal tax rates between income from debt and income from equity eliminates the disadvantage from the double taxation (corporate and personal) of income from equity.

Perfect market view (of capital structure)
Analysis of a firm's capital structure decision, which shows the irrelevance of capital structure in a perfect capital market.

Perfect capital market
A market in which there are never any arbitrage opportunities.

Pecking-order view (of capital structure)
The argument that external financing transaction costs, especially those associated with the problem of adverse selection, create a dynamic environment in which firms have a preference, or pecking-order of preferred sources of financing, when all else is equal. Internally generated funds are the most preferred, new debt is next, debt-equity hybrids are next, and new equity is the least preferred source.

Outstanding share capital
Issued share capital less the par value of shares that are held in the company's treasury.

Other capital
In the balance of payments, other capital is a residual category that groups all the capital transactions that have not been included in direct investment, portfolio investment, and reserves categories. It is divided into long-term capital and short-term capital and, because of its residual status, can differ from country to country. Generally speaking, other long-term capital includes most non-negotiable instruments of a year or more like bank loans and mortgages. Other short-term capital i ...

Opportunity cost of capital
Expected return that is foregone by investing in a project rather than in comparable financial securities.

Nondiversifiability of human capital
The difficulty of diversifying one's human capital (the unique capabilities and expertise of individuals) and employment effort.

Market capitalization rate
Expected return on a security. The market-consensus estimate of the appropriate discount rate for a firm's cash flows.

Market capitalization
The total dollar value of all outstanding shares. Computed as shares times current market price. It is a measure of corporate size.

Long-term debt/capitalization
Indicator of financial leverage. Shows long-term debt as a proportion of the capital available. Determined by dividing long-term debt by the sum of long-term debt, preferred stock and common stockholder equity.

Legal capital
Value at which a company's shares are recorded in its books.

Capital
Money invested in a firm.

Capital account
Net result of public and private international investment and lending activities.

Capital allocation decision
Allocation of invested funds between risk-free assets versus the risky portfolio.

Capital budget
A firm's set of planned capital expenditures.

Capital budgeting
The process of choosing the firm's long-term capital assets.

Capital Builder Account (CBA)
A Merrill Lynch brokerage account that allows investors to access the loan value of his or her eligible securities to buy or sell securities. Excess cash in a CBA can be invested in a money market fund or an insured money market deposit account without losing access to the money.

Capital expenditures
Amount used during a particular period to acquire or improve long-term assets such as property, plant or equipment.

Capital flight
The transfer of capital abroad in response to fears of political risk.

Capital gain
When a stock is sold for a profit, it's the difference between the net sales price of securities and their net cost, or original basis. If a stock is sold below cost, the difference is a capital loss.

Capital gains yield
The price change portion of a stock's return.

Capital lease
A lease obligation that has to be capitalized on the balance sheet.

Capital loss
The difference between the net cost of a security and the net sale price, if that security is sold at a loss.

Capital market
The market for trading long-term debt instruments (those that mature in more than one year).

Capital market efficiency
Reflects the relative amount of wealth wasted in making transactions. An efficient capital market allows the transfer of assets with little wealth loss.

Capital market imperfections view
The view that issuing debt is generally valuable but that the firm's optimal choice of capital structure is a dynamic process that involves the other views of capital structure (net corporate/personal tax, agency cost, bankruptcy cost, and pecking order), which result from considerations of asymmetric information, asymmetric taxes, and transaction costs.

Capital market line (CML)
The line defined by every combination of the risk-free asset and the market portfolio.

Capital rationing
Placing one or more limits on the amount of new investment undertaken by a firm, either by using a higher cost of capital, or by setting a maximum on parts of, and/or the entirety of, the capital budget.

Capital structure
The makeup of the liabilities and stockholders' equity side of the balance sheet, especially the ratio of debt to equity and the mixture of short and long maturities.

Capital surplus
Amounts of directly contributed equity capital in excess of the par value.

Capitalization method
A method of constructing a replicating portfolio in which the manager purchases a number of the largest-capitalized names in the index stock in proportion to their capitalization.

Capitalization ratios
Also called financial leverage ratios, these ratios compare debt to total capitalization and thus reflect the extent to which a corporation is trading on its equity. Capitalization ratios can be interpreted only in the context of the stability of industry and company earnings and cash flow.

Capitalization table
A table showing the capitalization of a firm, which typically includes the amount of capital obtained from each source - long-term debt and common equity - and the respective capitalization ratios.

Capitalized
Recorded in asset accounts and then depreciated or amortized, as is appropriate for expenditures for items with useful lives greater than one year.

Capitalized interest
Interest that is not immediately expensed, but rather is considered as an asset and is then amortized through the income statement over time.

Complete capital market
A market in which there is a distinct marketable security for each and every possible outcome.

Cost of capital
The required return for a capital budgeting project.

Cost of limited partner capital
The discount rate that equates the after-tax inflows with outflows for capital raised from limited partners.

Authorised capital
The maximum amount of share capital that a public limited company or a private limited company can issue according to its articles of association. Part of the authorised capital can remain unissued.

Basel II (Basel Capital Accord)
Basel II - short for the new Basel Capital Accord - lays down new guidelines for determining the minimum solvency requirements for banks. The main change in these guidelines is a new system for weighting the risks run by banks in their loans to retail and corporate customers. The objective of Basel II is to improve the soundness of the financial system.

Capital coverage ratio
Available capital divided by required capital.

Risk-adjusted return on capital (RAROC)
Measures performance on a risk-adjusted basis. Calculated as the economic return divided by economic capital. RAROC helps determine if a company has the right balance between capital, returns and risk. The central concept in RAROC is economic capital: the amount of capital a company should put aside needed based on the risk it runs.

Flight Capital
Money that flows offshore and likely never returns. Flight is exacerbated by a lack of confidence as government grows without bounds.

Risk Capital
Money put up by ordinary shareholders, an individual entrepreneur or venture capitalist that will be lost if the enterprise fails.

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Subordinated debenture bond

An unsecured bond that ranks after secured debt, after debenture bonds, and often after some general creditors in its claim on assets and earnings. Related: Debenture bond, mortgage bond, collateral trust bonds.


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