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start-up capital
The capital needed by an entrepreneur to set up a business
Working capital
The capital needed to pay for raw materials, day-to-day running costs and credit offered to customers
Short-term finance
money required for short periods of time of up to one year
Long-term finance
money required for more than one year
profit
The value of goods sold (revenue) less costs
Liquidity
The ability of a business to pay its short-term debts
administration
when administrators manage a business that is unable to pay its debts with the intention of selling it as a going concern (met de bedoeling deze als een lopende onderneming te verkopen
Bankruptcy
The legal procedure for liquidating a business or property owned by an individual which cannot fully pay its debts out of its current assets
Liquidation
when a business ceases trading and its assets are sold for cash to pay suppliers and other creditors
current assets
assets that either are cash or likely to be turned into cash within 12 months (inventory and trade receivables or debtors)
Current Liabilities
Debts that usually have to be paid within one year
Capital expenditure
the purchase of non-current assets that are expected to last for more than one year, such as buildings and machinery
Revenue expenditure
spending on all costs and assets other than non-current assets, which includes wages, salaries and inventory of materials
retained earnings
profit after tax retained in a company rather than paid out to shareholders as dividends
Internal Sources
Raising finance from the business's own assets or from profits left in the business (retained earnings) Financiering uit de eigen activa van de onderneming of uit de winst die in de onderneming wordt geëffectueerd (ingehouden winst)
External Sources
raising finance from sources outside the business, for example banks
Non-current assets
assets kept and used by the business for more than one year
overdraft
a credit that a bank agrees can be borrowed by a business up to an agreed limit as and when required
Factoring
Selling of claims over trade receivables (debtors) to a specialist organisation (debt factor) in exchange for immediate liquidity= De verkoop van vorderingen uit hoofde van handelsvorderingen (debiteuren) aan een gespecialiseerde organisatie (factoringbedrijf) in ruil voor onmiddellijke liquiditeit
hire purchase
a company purchases an asset and agrees to pay fixed repayments over an agreed time period. The asset belongs to the purchasing company once the final payment has been made
Leasing
obtaining the use of an asset and paying a leasing charge over a fixed period, avoiding the need to raise long-term capital to buy the asset. The asset is owned by the leasing company
Long-term loans
loans that do not have to be repaid for at least one year
Debentures
long-term bonds issued by companies to raise debt finance, often with a fixed rate of interest
Share (or equity) capital
permanent finance raised by companies through the sale of shares
Business mortgages
long-term loans to companies purchasing a property for business premises, with the property acting as collateral security on the loan
venture capital
risk capital invested in business start-ups or expanding small businesses that have good profit potential but do not find it easy to gain finance from other sources
collateral security
an asset which a business pledges to a lender and which must be sold off to pay a debt if the loan is not repaid= een actief dat een onderneming aan een kredietverstrekker in onderpand geeft en dat moet worden verkocht om een schuld te voldoen indien de lening niet wordt terugbetaald
rights issue
existing shareholders are given the right to buy additional shares at a discounted price
Microfinance
providing financial services for poor and low-income customers who do not have access to banking services, such as loans and overdrafts offered by traditional commercial banks
Crowd funding
the use of small amounts of capital from a large number of individuals to finance a new business venture
Cash flow
the sum of cash payments to a business less the sum of cash payments from the business
insolvent
when a business cannot meet its short-term debts
Cash flow forecast
an estimate of the future cash inflows and outflows of a business
Cash inflow
cash payments into a business
Cash outflow
cash payments out of a business
Net cash flow
estimated difference between cash inflows and cash outflows for the period
Opening cash balance
Cash held by the business at the start of the month
Closing cash balance
cash held by the business at the end of the month, which becomes next month's opening balance
Credit control
monitoring of debts to ensure that credit periods are not exceeded het bijhouden van vorderingen om ervoor te zorgen dat de betalingstermijnen niet worden overschreden
bad debt
Unpaid customers' bills that are now very unlikely to ever be paid
Overtrading
Expanding a business rapidly without obtaining all of the necessary finance, resulting in a cash flow shortage (Een bedrijf snel uitbreiden zonder over de benodigde financiering te beschikken, met een tekort aan liquide middelen tot gevolg)
break-even point
the level of output at which total costs equal total revenue, when neither a profit nor a loss is made
Cost centre
the section of a business, such as a department or a product, that incurs the costs
Direct costs
These costs can be clearly identified with each unit of production and can be allocated to a cost centre
Indirect Costs
costs that cannot be identified with a unit of production or allocated accurately to a cost centre
fixed costs
costs that do not vary with output in the short run (kosten die op de korte termijn niet met de productie mee variëren)
variable costs
costs that vary with output
total cost
variable cost plus fixed cost
profit center
a section of a business to which both costs and revenues can be allocated, so profit can be calculated
average cost
Total cost divided by the number of units produced
Full costing
A method of costing in which all indirect and direct costs are allocated to the products, services or divisions of a business
Contribution costing
Costing method that allocates only direct costs to cost centres and profit centres, not overhead costs= Een kostenberekeningsmethode waarbij alleen directe kosten aan kostenplaatsen en winstcentra worden toegerekend, en geen overheadkosten
marginal cost
the additional cost of producing one more unit of output
break-even analysis
uses cost and revenue data to determine the break-even point of production
Margin of Safety
the amount by which the current output level exceeds the break-even level of output
Contribution per unit
The price of a product less the direct (variable) costs of producing it