Filleted accounts and Finance: Difference between pages

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Filleted accounts are accounts which contain less information than full accounts.
1.


Most financial reporting systems allow smaller and medium-sized organisations to report limited financial information in this way for some purposes, in order to reduce the administrative burdens on them. For example, UK company law allows smaller entities to report less information for the public record at Companies House, compared with larger organisations.
The practice and theory of managing money.


However, fuller-form and more detailed accounts are normally still required for other purposes. For example, for most tax purposes and for reporting to shareholders.


Sometimes known as filleted financial statements.
2. ''Verb''


To provide or to obtain funds, capital or credit.


==See also==
 
* [[Abridged accounts]]
3. ''Capital and projects''
* [[Companies House]]
 
Capital loaned or provided for a particular purpose, especially that which has to be raised to start a new project.
 
 
4. ''Organisational structure''
 
The corporate function which deals with an organisation's own money. 
 
Contrasted with the firm's operations, which are essentially everything else.
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Capital]]
* [[Corporate]]
* [[Credit]]
* [[Financial reporting]]
* [[Funds]]
* [[Loan]]
* [[Money]]
* [[Organisation]]
* [[Project finance]]
 
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 13:19, 11 March 2021

1.

The practice and theory of managing money.


2. Verb

To provide or to obtain funds, capital or credit.


3. Capital and projects

Capital loaned or provided for a particular purpose, especially that which has to be raised to start a new project.


4. Organisational structure

The corporate function which deals with an organisation's own money.

Contrasted with the firm's operations, which are essentially everything else.


See also