Fungibility and Gearing: Difference between pages

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1.
''Financial gearing'' measures the relative amount of debt in a firm's capital structure.


'Fungibility' describes the extent to which one security can be substituted for another.
Gearing ratios can be calculated in several different ways, so consistency of approach is important.


Two essential bases to define are:


2.
i. The use of book or market values.
ii. The use of Debt divided by Equity (D/E) or of Debt divided by Debt plus Equity = D/[D+E].


It may also describe a situation in which securities or other assets are fully interchangeable (fungible).
Historically, use of the D/E version of the measure was more common in the UK.


With respect to the Debt figure, practice varies in including or excluding certain items such as cash, short term borrowings, leases, pensions and other provisions.
Practitioners may also adjust the Equity figure, for example to exclude intangible assets.
2.
''Operational gearing'' relates to the operating costs of a business, and measures the relative proportions of fixed and variable operating costs.
3.
'Gearing up' refers to increasing the levels of financial or operation gearing - or both - within an organisation.
The intention of gearing up is to improve expected net results.  The consequence of gearing up is normally to increase risk.
Many financial disasters have been a consequence of gearing up (or leveraging) in this way in earlier periods.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Assets]]
* [[Debt equity ratio]]
* [[Benchmark]]
* [[Debt to equity ratio]]
* [[Commodity]]
* [[Intangible assets]]
* [[Fungible]]
* [[Leverage]]
* [[Non-fungible token]]
* [[Leveraged]]
* [[Leveraged takeover]]
* [[Levered]]
* [[Off-balance sheet finance]]
* [[Ungeared]]
* [[Ungeared cash flow]]


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

Revision as of 14:19, 23 October 2012

1. Financial gearing measures the relative amount of debt in a firm's capital structure.

Gearing ratios can be calculated in several different ways, so consistency of approach is important.

Two essential bases to define are:

i. The use of book or market values. ii. The use of Debt divided by Equity (D/E) or of Debt divided by Debt plus Equity = D/[D+E].

Historically, use of the D/E version of the measure was more common in the UK.

With respect to the Debt figure, practice varies in including or excluding certain items such as cash, short term borrowings, leases, pensions and other provisions. Practitioners may also adjust the Equity figure, for example to exclude intangible assets.

2. Operational gearing relates to the operating costs of a business, and measures the relative proportions of fixed and variable operating costs.

3. 'Gearing up' refers to increasing the levels of financial or operation gearing - or both - within an organisation. The intention of gearing up is to improve expected net results. The consequence of gearing up is normally to increase risk.

Many financial disasters have been a consequence of gearing up (or leveraging) in this way in earlier periods.

See also