Dilution and Nominal: Difference between pages

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1. ''Corporate finance''.
#Named, or 'headline'. A nominal annual rate would be a market rate named, or quoted, in a particular financial market.
 
#A term which has <u>not</u> been restated to exclude the effects of inflation. This is the most commonly used basis for measuring and quoting financial information, also known as 'money terms'. (Contrasted with [[real]] terms.)
Adverse effects on the shareholder value, control or earnings per share of current shareholders of an additional issue of ranking share capital.
#Small. For example, nominal damages or compensation would be a small amount, indicating that the party awarded them was technically in the right, but that the court did not approve of the case being brought to litigation in the circumstances.
 
 
2. ''Corporate finance''.
 
The adverse effects on the shareholder value, control and earnings per share of current shareholders of ''prospective future'' issues of ranking share capital.
 
 
3. ''Supply chain finance''.
 
An event, short of default by the debtor, which reduces the value of an outstanding invoice.
 
Examples include commercial disputes and credit notes.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Corporate finance]]
* [[Aggregate money demand]]
* [[Credit note]]
* [[Nominal annual rate]]
* [[Debtors]]
* [[Real]]
* [[Default]]
* [[Notional principal]]
* [[Diluted earnings per share]]
* [[Invoice]]
* [[Series A]]
* [[Series B]]
* [[Share]]
* [[Shareholder value]]
* [[Supply chain finance]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]

Revision as of 16:00, 21 November 2015

  1. Named, or 'headline'. A nominal annual rate would be a market rate named, or quoted, in a particular financial market.
  2. A term which has not been restated to exclude the effects of inflation. This is the most commonly used basis for measuring and quoting financial information, also known as 'money terms'. (Contrasted with real terms.)
  3. Small. For example, nominal damages or compensation would be a small amount, indicating that the party awarded them was technically in the right, but that the court did not approve of the case being brought to litigation in the circumstances.


See also