
Central Bank of Egypt Credit Risk
... Liquidity risk • Liquidity risk is concerned with an investor having to sell a bond below its indicated value, the indication having come from a recent transaction. • Liquidity refers to how deep or liquid the market is for a particular security. If the market is deep, an investor can purchase or se ...
... Liquidity risk • Liquidity risk is concerned with an investor having to sell a bond below its indicated value, the indication having come from a recent transaction. • Liquidity refers to how deep or liquid the market is for a particular security. If the market is deep, an investor can purchase or se ...
Grade 9 General Ledger sections
... The first is the ‘balance sheet section’ that contains all the accounts from which the balance sheet is compiled. These accounts have to do with assets, liabilities and owner’s equity. The second section is the nominal accounts section, which is also called the ‘profit and loss accounts’ section. Th ...
... The first is the ‘balance sheet section’ that contains all the accounts from which the balance sheet is compiled. These accounts have to do with assets, liabilities and owner’s equity. The second section is the nominal accounts section, which is also called the ‘profit and loss accounts’ section. Th ...
International Public Sector Accounting Standard 34 Separate
... The equity method is a well-established method of accounting for certain investments in the public sector. In many circumstances where investments are held by public sector entities, the equity method can provide information that is reliable and useful, and possibly at a lower cost than either the c ...
... The equity method is a well-established method of accounting for certain investments in the public sector. In many circumstances where investments are held by public sector entities, the equity method can provide information that is reliable and useful, and possibly at a lower cost than either the c ...
Slides
... • Continued debate and renewed interest in capital controls – Emerging market crises – Global financial crisis – Theoretical literature (Trilemma, Pecuniary externalities) ...
... • Continued debate and renewed interest in capital controls – Emerging market crises – Global financial crisis – Theoretical literature (Trilemma, Pecuniary externalities) ...
Access to Financial Services as a Driver for the Post-2015
... Working Group proposal for the SDGs which made access to financial services a component in several targets (see box). The General Assembly has already decided that this proposal is the main basis for the post-2015 intergovernmental process. Furthermore, the synthesis report from the United Nations S ...
... Working Group proposal for the SDGs which made access to financial services a component in several targets (see box). The General Assembly has already decided that this proposal is the main basis for the post-2015 intergovernmental process. Furthermore, the synthesis report from the United Nations S ...
6.00 Understand Financial Analysis
... • Capital Investment Decisions - Decisions that determine which projects a business will invest in, how the investment(s) will be financed, and whether or not to pay dividends to shareholders. ...
... • Capital Investment Decisions - Decisions that determine which projects a business will invest in, how the investment(s) will be financed, and whether or not to pay dividends to shareholders. ...
- the Other Canon
... they have been forced into the job market by a tightening wage squeeze on most families. One of the most remarkable achievements of recent generations has been the disappearance of world war as an imminent threat. The collapse of Soviet Communism promised an end to the world arms race, yet governmen ...
... they have been forced into the job market by a tightening wage squeeze on most families. One of the most remarkable achievements of recent generations has been the disappearance of world war as an imminent threat. The collapse of Soviet Communism promised an end to the world arms race, yet governmen ...
When Valuing a Manufacturing Business, Work With a Pro
... manufacturer’s workforce. Or he or she might hypothesize a more cost-efficient workforce — a smaller number of more highly skilled employees, for example — that could match the current workforce’s output. The right method depends on the nature of the business and its industry. ...
... manufacturer’s workforce. Or he or she might hypothesize a more cost-efficient workforce — a smaller number of more highly skilled employees, for example — that could match the current workforce’s output. The right method depends on the nature of the business and its industry. ...
Tax Havens and Illicit Financial Flows
... Important: distinguish licit capital flows from capital flight or illicit flows Capital flight from Africa: several channels ...
... Important: distinguish licit capital flows from capital flight or illicit flows Capital flight from Africa: several channels ...
CASE 2
... encounter little or no growth in the future. They estimated that stockholders also should expect no growth in future dividends. Contrary to the conservative securities analysts, Moogy Ellis feels that the company could maintain a constant annual growth rate in dividends per share of 9.5% in the futu ...
... encounter little or no growth in the future. They estimated that stockholders also should expect no growth in future dividends. Contrary to the conservative securities analysts, Moogy Ellis feels that the company could maintain a constant annual growth rate in dividends per share of 9.5% in the futu ...
Financial Instruments
... If classified as ―amortised cost‖, the effective interest rate method is applied in arriving at an updated valuation at each reporting date. See example 1 for an illustration of how this works. If classified as ―fair value‖, the asset is revalued to fair value at each reporting date. Gains and losse ...
... If classified as ―amortised cost‖, the effective interest rate method is applied in arriving at an updated valuation at each reporting date. See example 1 for an illustration of how this works. If classified as ―fair value‖, the asset is revalued to fair value at each reporting date. Gains and losse ...
Note
... companies. Beginning Dec. 2008, there are no longer trust and investment companies in operation. Data are derived from balance sheet data published in the Financial Statistics Monthly, ROC (Taiwan) and are not fully based on the Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual (MFSM), 2000 methodology. Depa ...
... companies. Beginning Dec. 2008, there are no longer trust and investment companies in operation. Data are derived from balance sheet data published in the Financial Statistics Monthly, ROC (Taiwan) and are not fully based on the Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual (MFSM), 2000 methodology. Depa ...
Challenges for the Central Bank
... growth is no longer in double digits Indian recovery rather sharp and swift in 2009-10 (8.6 per cent) and sustained in 2010-11 (9.3 per cent) Thereafter, overall GDP growth witnessed sharp decline to 6.2 per cent in 2011-12 and further to 5 per cent in 2012-13 (provisional) ...
... growth is no longer in double digits Indian recovery rather sharp and swift in 2009-10 (8.6 per cent) and sustained in 2010-11 (9.3 per cent) Thereafter, overall GDP growth witnessed sharp decline to 6.2 per cent in 2011-12 and further to 5 per cent in 2012-13 (provisional) ...
Differences between SNA 2008 and ESA 2010
... Reasons behind the practical decision • Most of Hungarian holding companies are parts of an ownership chain through which foreign owners control resident non-financial corporations. The reclassification of these holding companies would split the investment links between the foreign investors and th ...
... Reasons behind the practical decision • Most of Hungarian holding companies are parts of an ownership chain through which foreign owners control resident non-financial corporations. The reclassification of these holding companies would split the investment links between the foreign investors and th ...
Financialization

Financialization is a term sometimes used in discussions of the financial capitalism that has developed over the decades between 1980 and 2010, in which financial leverage tended to override capital (equity), and financial markets tended to dominate over the traditional industrial economy and agricultural economics.Financialization describes an economic system or process that attempts to reduce all value that is exchanged (whether tangible or intangible, future or present promises, etc.) into a financial instrument. The intent of financialization is to be able to reduce any work product or service to an exchangeable financial instrument, like currency, and thus make it easier for people to trade these financial instruments.Workers, through a financial instrument such as a mortgage, may trade their promise of future work or wages for a home. The financialization of risk sharing is what makes possible all insurance. The financialization of a government's promises (e.g., US government bonds) is what makes possible all government deficit spending. Financialization also makes economic rents possible.