Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Reconciliation: Difference between pages

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(OCC).
1. ''Cash management and accounting''.  


1. ''United States''
A reconciliation is any quantified explanation of the differences between two related amounts.


The US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is responsible for the regulation of nationally chartered banks in the US, including internet-based banks.  
Reconciliation checks are an important feature of internal control systems, to provide additional assurance about the completeness and accuracy of recording financial and other information.


It issues the national charters and monitors bank performance and loan credit quality ratings.


A very important example is the reconciliation of bank statement balances with the amounts in the customer organisation's internal records.


2.


Similar governmental functions in other countries.
Another common accounting example is the reconciliation of reported operating profit to net operating cash flows.


This statement explains why the figure for accounting profit differs from the net operating cash flows for the same period. 


==See also==
Each item contributing to the net difference is quantified within the reconciliation statement.
*[[Argentina]]
 
*[[United States]]
 
Another example is the comparison of a physical count of stock or other assets, compared with the amounts in financial or other records.
 
 
 
2.
 
An example of a reconciliation is a quantified explanation of the ''change'' in any balance, over a time period.
 
 
''Sometimes abbreviated to 'rec'.''
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Accounting records]]
* [[Bank reconciliation]]
* [[Cash flow]]
* [[Cash management]]
* [[Cash reconciliation]]
* [[Conciliation]]
* [[Full reconciliation]]
* [[Profit]]
* [[Tax reconciliation]]
* [[Variance analysis]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 11:48, 3 May 2022

1. Cash management and accounting.

A reconciliation is any quantified explanation of the differences between two related amounts.

Reconciliation checks are an important feature of internal control systems, to provide additional assurance about the completeness and accuracy of recording financial and other information.


A very important example is the reconciliation of bank statement balances with the amounts in the customer organisation's internal records.


Another common accounting example is the reconciliation of reported operating profit to net operating cash flows.

This statement explains why the figure for accounting profit differs from the net operating cash flows for the same period.

Each item contributing to the net difference is quantified within the reconciliation statement.


Another example is the comparison of a physical count of stock or other assets, compared with the amounts in financial or other records.


2.

An example of a reconciliation is a quantified explanation of the change in any balance, over a time period.


Sometimes abbreviated to 'rec'.


See also