Federal Funds Rate and Operating lease: Difference between pages

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''US banking''.   
An operating lease involves the lessee (user) paying rentals for the hire of an asset for a period of time which is normally substantially less than the asset’s full useful life.
   
The owner (lessor) retains the significant risks and rewards of ownership - usually including the responsibility for maintenance, insurance and the like, and enjoyment of a significant residual value of the asset at the end of the lease term.


The Federal Funds Rate is the rate of interest charged on overnight loans from banks’ deposit accounts held at the Federal Reserve (the USA’s central monetary authority) to other banks.
Under IAS 17 and SSAP 21, operating leases are accounted for 'off balance sheet' by the user of the asset.
This means that the obligations/liabilities to pay future lease instalments are only disclosed in the notes to the financial statements, not on the face of the balance sheet.


== See also ==
* [[ED 2010/9]]
* [[Finance lease]]
* [[IAS 17]]
* [[Lease]]
* [[SSAP 21]]




== See also ==
==Other links==
* [[Benchmark]]
*[http://www.treasurers.org/node/8924 A Lesson on leases, The Treasurer, April 2013]
* [[Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System]]
* [[EFFR]]
* [[Fed funds]]
* [[Federal funds futures]]  (FFF)
* [[Federal Reserve]]
* [[Federal Reserve Bank]]
* [[Federal Reserve System]]
* [[Monetary authority]]
* [[OBFR]]
* [[Policy interest rate]]


[[Category:Cash_management]]
*[http://www.treasurers.org/node/8011 Operating lease accounting changes,The Treasurer.July 2012]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]
[[Category:Liquidity_management]]

Revision as of 14:15, 2 October 2013

An operating lease involves the lessee (user) paying rentals for the hire of an asset for a period of time which is normally substantially less than the asset’s full useful life.

The owner (lessor) retains the significant risks and rewards of ownership - usually including the responsibility for maintenance, insurance and the like, and enjoyment of a significant residual value of the asset at the end of the lease term.

Under IAS 17 and SSAP 21, operating leases are accounted for 'off balance sheet' by the user of the asset. This means that the obligations/liabilities to pay future lease instalments are only disclosed in the notes to the financial statements, not on the face of the balance sheet.

See also


Other links