Cash flow: Difference between revisions
From ACT Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Doug Williamson (Add heading.) |
imported>Doug Williamson (Add links.) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
#Items in cash flow which are not part of profit or loss. For example capital expenditure or the collection of trade debtors arising and recognised in prior periods; and | #Items in cash flow which are not part of profit or loss. For example capital expenditure or the collection of trade debtors arising and recognised in prior periods; and | ||
#Items in profit or loss which are not cash flows, such as depreciation, amortisation, or making accruals. | #Items in profit or loss which are not cash flows, such as depreciation, amortisation, or making accruals. | ||
It's important to distinguish our cash flow from our cash ''balance''. | |||
Cash flow is a movement in the amount of our cash. | |||
It either increases - or decreases - our cash balance. | |||
Our cash balance is the amount of cash we hold. | |||
Line 21: | Line 30: | ||
* [[Balance sheet]] | * [[Balance sheet]] | ||
* [[Cash]] | * [[Cash]] | ||
* [[Cash balance]] | |||
* [[Cash burn rate]] | * [[Cash burn rate]] | ||
* [[Cash concentration]] | * [[Cash concentration]] | ||
Line 41: | Line 51: | ||
* [[IAS 7]] | * [[IAS 7]] | ||
* [[Incremental cash flows]] | * [[Incremental cash flows]] | ||
* [[Liquid]] | |||
* [[Liquidate]] | |||
* [[Liquidity]] | * [[Liquidity]] | ||
* [[Liquidity risk]] | * [[Liquidity risk]] |
Latest revision as of 21:17, 21 July 2022
Accounting - cash management - financial reporting.
(CF).
The movement of cash in or out of a business, a project or a financial instrument in a particular period under review.
The cash flow for a given period may differ from the profit or loss for the same period because of:
- Items in cash flow which are not part of profit or loss. For example capital expenditure or the collection of trade debtors arising and recognised in prior periods; and
- Items in profit or loss which are not cash flows, such as depreciation, amortisation, or making accruals.
It's important to distinguish our cash flow from our cash balance.
Cash flow is a movement in the amount of our cash.
It either increases - or decreases - our cash balance.
Our cash balance is the amount of cash we hold.
Cash flow is sometimes written cashflow.
See also
- Accrual
- Amortisation
- Balance
- Balance sheet
- Cash
- Cash balance
- Cash burn rate
- Cash concentration
- Cash conversion cycle
- Cash conversion efficiency
- Cash flow at risk
- Cash flow exposure
- Cash flow hedge accounting
- Cash flow insolvent
- Cash flow management
- Cash flow statement
- Cash forecasting
- Cash management
- Certificate in International Cash Management (CertICM)
- Depreciation
- Discounted cash flow (DCF)
- Financial reporting
- Free cash flow
- Geared cash flow
- IAS 7
- Incremental cash flows
- Liquid
- Liquidate
- Liquidity
- Liquidity risk
- Order to cash cycle
- Profit
- Reconciliation
- Risk
- Shareholders cash flow
- Statement of cash flows
- Ungeared cash flow