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Capitalizationn. 1) the act of counting anticipated earnings and expenses as ca...
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CapitalizationThe debt and/or equity mix that funds a firm's assets.
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Capitalization1860, "act of converting (assets) to capital," noun of action from capitalize in the financial sense. Meaning "act of writing or printing in capital letters" is recorded from 1864.
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CapitalizationThe addition of unpaid accrued interest applied to the principal balance of a loan that increases the total debt outstanding.
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CapitalizationTotal amount of the various securities issued by a corporation. Capitalization may include bonds, debentures, preferred and common stock, and surplus. Bonds and debentures are usually carried on the b [..]
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Capitalization1) The writing off of a capital expenditure proportionately over future years when the benefit from the expenditure is not confined to the period under consideration. 2) The sum of a corporation' [..]
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Capitalizationwriting in capital letters an estimation of the value of a business the act of capitalizing on an opportunity the sale of capital stock Capitalization (or capitalisation -- see spelling differences) i [..]
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CapitalizationA financial term used to describe the value financial markets put on a company. Determined by multiplying the number of outstanding shares of a company by the current stock price.
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CapitalizationDefinitions (2) 1. The sum of a corporation's long-term debt, stock and retained earnings. also called invested capital.
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CapitalizationThe writing or printing of a letter, word, or words in uppercase rather than lowercase. Also refers to the conventions in a language with respect to words written or printed with certain letters in up [..]
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Capitalizationfalls under several categories, but broadly refers to the use of money within a business or company. One use of the term capitalization is to simply refer to the funding of a new business. The method [..]
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Capitalization; however market specific capitalization or MCAP in its abbreviated form, is when a company's outstanding shares are multiplied by its share price, giving the total dollar market value of all of [..]
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Capitalization1 : the act or process of capitalizing [ of earnings] 2 : a sum resulting from a process of capitalizing ;esp : paid-in capital at capital [inadequate ] 3 : total capital liabilities of a ...
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CapitalizationThe practice of adding unpaid interest charges to the principal balance of an educational loan, thereby increasing the size of the loan. Interest is then charged on the new balance, including both the unpaid principal and the accrued interest. Capitalizing the interest increases the monthly payment and the amount of money you will eventually have t [..]
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CapitalizationThe total dollar value of various securities issued by a company.
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CapitalizationLong-term debt, preferred stock and net worth. The loan capital of a community development loan fund; includes that which has been borrowed from and is repayable to third parties as well as that which [..]
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CapitalizationThe process of ascertaining the value of a property by the use of a proper investment rate of return and the net income expected to be produced by the property. The formula of net annual i [..]
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CapitalizationThe distribution, nature and magnitude of an organization’s assets, liabilities and net assets. Also known as capital structure. Healthy organizations make choices about how they are capitalized, understanding the relative risks and merits of various options—e.g., whether to buy a building or grow an endowment. Also, “capitalized” refers to the pur [..]
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CapitalizationEquity and debt that the firm’s assets are funded with.
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CapitalizationThe term refers to an arrangement between you and the lender that defers interest payments as they come due and adds them to the principal amount of your loan.
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CapitalizationAdding unpaid interest to the original amount borrowed.
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CapitalizationCapitalization is a measure of a company's value. It can be calculated as the sum of a company's long-term debt and equity, or as the stock price multiplied by the number of shares outstandi [..]
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CapitalizationCapitalization is an accounting method in which anticipated earnings and expenses are classified as capital assets (property, equipment, fixtures) because of the relatively long life of the asset. It [..]
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CapitalizationThe total dollar value of all stocks and bonds issued by a corporation
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CapitalizationThe addition of unpaid interest to the principal balance of a loan. Compounding is another term used for capitalization.
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CapitalizationProcess of depositing various funds as seed capital into a lending institution to enable financial services. This pool of money is distributed, through loans and credit enhancements, in such a way to ensure that payments are made back to preserve the corpus.
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CapitalizationIn the context of bank supervision, capitalization refers to the funds a bank holds as a buffer against unexpected losses. It includes shareholders’ equity, loss reserves, and retained earnings. Bank capitalization plays a critical role in the safety and soundness of individual banks and the banking system. In most cases, federal regulators set req [..]
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Capitalization(n) writing in capital letters(n) an estimation of the value of a business(n) the act of capitalizing on an opportunity(n) the sale of capital stock
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CapitalizationThe total of long-term debt, preferred stock and common stock equity.
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CapitalizationA process of determining the value of real property in which project income is divided by a predetermined annual rate (capitalization rate). For example, a building with annual project income of $100,000 is worth $1,000,000 at a 10 per cent capitalization rate ($ 100,000/10% = $ 1,000,000). See “Capitalization Rate”
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CapitalizationThe debt and/or equity mix of a firm's assets.
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CapitalizationCapitalization of interest occurs when unpaid interest is added to the principal balance of the loan. After interest is capitalized, interest may be charged on interest, not just principal, increasing [..]
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CapitalizationThe total of a company¹s long-term debt, preferred stock, and common stock equity.
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Capitalizationn. capitalización
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CapitalizationThe market value of a company’s outstanding securities, excluding current liabilities. Under $3 billion is generally considered small-cap; $2 - $10 billion is mid-cap; and over $8 billion is large-cap [..]
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CapitalizationThe market value of a company’s outstanding securities, excluding current liabilities. Under $3 billion is generally considered small-cap; $2 - $10 billion is mid-cap; and over $8 billion is large-cap [..]
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CapitalizationWhen interest is added to the base loan amount, rather than being paid immediately. Any future interest increases because it's based on the higher loan amount (the combined total of principal and accrued interest), a.k.a. the snowball effect. Tip: Avoid capitalization if you can by making interest payments while in school. You'll save mon [..]
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CapitalizationThe market value of a company’s outstanding securities, excluding current liabilities. Under $3 billion is generally considered small-cap; $2 - $10 billion is mid-cap; and over $8 billion is large-cap.
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CapitalizationThe addition of unpaid accrued interest to the principal balance of a loan increases the outstanding principal amount due on the loan. Since interest accrues on the capitalized interest, it adds an ex [..]
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CapitalizationThe addition of unpaid interest to the principal balance of a loan. When the interest is not paid as it accrues during periods of in-school status, the grace period, deferment, or forbearance, your lender may capitalize the interest. This increases the outstanding principal amount due on the loan and may cause your monthly payment amount to increa [..]
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Capitalizationmeasures the exposure of a company’s surplus to various operating and financial practices. A highly leveraged, or poorly capitalized, company can show a high return on surplus, but may be exposed to a [..]
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CapitalizationThe total amount of all securities, including long-term debt, common and preferred stock, issued by a company.
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CapitalizationA financial term used to describe the value financial markets put on a company. Determined by multiplying the number of outstanding shares of a company by the current stock price. Cesium magnetometer
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CapitalizationThe market value of a company, calculated by multiplying the number of shares outstanding by the price per share.
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CapitalizationA financial term used to describe the value financial markets put on a company. Determined by multiplying the number of outstanding shares of a company by the current stock price. Capital stock
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CapitalizationThe total stock market value of all shares of a company’s stock (the stock price multiplied by the number of shares outstanding). cash investment.
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CapitalizationA conversion of a single period stream of benefits into value.
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Capitalizationn. 1) the act of counting anticipated earnings and expenses as capital assets (property, equipment, fixtures) for accounting purposes. 2) the amount of anticipated net earnings which hypothetically ca [..]
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CapitalizationThe size of a company whose stock an investor might own, described as large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap.
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CapitalizationUnpaid interest is added to the principal of the loan, increasing the monthly payment and the total balance of the loan.
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CapitalizationIn accounting, the recording of a fixed asset that allows the related value of the fixed asset (cost) to be allocated or depreciated (expensed) over the life of the asset
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CapitalizationThe process of adding unpaid interest to the principal balance of an educational loan, thereby increasing the total amount to be repaid.
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CapitalizationUnpaid interest added to the loan principal, which increases the principal amount of the loan and its total cost.
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CapitalizationThe practice of adding interest to the principal, or loan amount, instead of paying the interest while in school. Capitalization eliminates payments while in school, but does increase the amount owed [..]
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Capitalizationwhen interest is added to the principal balance of a loan rather than being paid as it accrues; any future interest is based on the higher loan amount.
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CapitalizationThe arrangement between borrower and lender whereby interest payments are deferred as they come due and are added to the principal amount of the loan.
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CapitalizationAddition of unpaid interest to the principal balance of a loan which increases the total outstanding balance due. See also interest capitalization.
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CapitalizationThe practice of adding unpaid interest charges to the principal balance of an educational loan, thereby increasing the size of the loan. Interest is then charged on the new balance, including both the [..]
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Capitalization when interest is added to the principal balance of a loan rather than being paid as it accrues; any future interest is based on the higher loan amount.
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Capitalization
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CapitalizationThis occurs when interest on your loan accrues and is periodically added to the principal. Capitalization increases your balance due. Interest is charged on the new balance, including both the principal and unpaid interest. This may increase your monthly payments on a loan. Capitalization is also called compounding.
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CapitalizationA term used to describe a method of computing interest. To capitalize a loan means to add all interest that has accrued to the principal loan amount. Once a loan is capitalized, the new loan amount (b [..]
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CapitalizationThe addition of unpaid interest to the principal balance of a loan. When the interest is not paid as it accrues during periods of in-school status, the grace period, deferment, or forbearance, your le [..]
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CapitalizationThe process of adding unpaid interest to the principal balance of an educational loan, increasing the size of the loan that must be repaid.
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CapitalizationThe process of adding unpaid interest to the principal balance of an educational loan, thereby increasing the total amount to be repaid.
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CapitalizationCapitalization is the practice of adding unpaid interest charges to the principal balance of an education loan, thereby increasing the size and cost of the loan. Interest is then charged on the new ba [..]
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Capitalization This occurs when unpaid interest is added to the principa [..]
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Capitalization(type of income) See: type of share/unit of UCI
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Capitalization
from=American spelling|from2=Oxford British spelling|capitalisation|lang=en
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CapitalizationCitations:capitalisation
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Capitalization1. In the appraisal process, the conversion of earnings anticipated from the typical operation of a property into a sum of present worth (capital value). 2. In mortgaging, the addition of interest owe [..]
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CapitalizationThe debt and/or equity mix that funds a firm's assets.
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CapitalizationCapitalization (North American English) or capitalisation (British English) is writing a word with its first letter as a capital letter (uppercase letter) and the remaining letters in lower case, in w [..]
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CapitalizationCapitalization (North American English) or capitalisation (British English) is writing a word with its first letter as a capital letter (uppercase letter) and the remaining letters in lower case, in w [..]
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CapitalizationFor Wikipedia guidelines for capitalization, see Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Capital letters.Capitalization is writing a word that has the first letter uppercase and the rest lowercase
Capitalization al [..]
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CapitalizationCapitalization (North American English) or capitalisation (British English) is writing a word with its first letter as a capital letter (uppercase letter) and the remaining letters in lower case, in w [..]
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CapitalizationCapitalization (North American English) or capitalisation (British English) is writing a word with its first letter as a capital letter (uppercase letter) and the remaining letters in lower case, in w [..]
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