Current assets and Flat yield curve: Difference between pages

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''Financial reporting - balance sheet - assets & liabilities.''
This means that the yield is the same for all maturities of funds.  


Assets that are likely to be converted into cash within a year or a normal accounting cycle.
For example the 1 year yield = 2 year yield = 3 year yield, and so on.
 
 
The relationships between the zero coupon yield, the forward yield, and the par yield depend on the basis on which the yields are quoted.
 
When all rates are quoted on an annual effective rate basis and the annual effective yield curve is flat, the zero coupon yield, the forward yield and the par yield are all the same, and all flat.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Assets]]
* [[Annual effective rate]]
* [[Balance sheet]]
* [[Forward yield]]
* [[Current liabilities]]
* [[Zero coupon yield]]
* [[Current ratio]]
* [[Par yield]]
* [[Fixed assets]]
* [[Yield curve]]
* [[Non-current]]
* [[Falling yield curve]]
 
* [[Rising yield curve]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
* [[Positive yield curve]]
* [[Negative yield curve]]

Revision as of 10:38, 13 November 2015

This means that the yield is the same for all maturities of funds.

For example the 1 year yield = 2 year yield = 3 year yield, and so on.


The relationships between the zero coupon yield, the forward yield, and the par yield depend on the basis on which the yields are quoted.

When all rates are quoted on an annual effective rate basis and the annual effective yield curve is flat, the zero coupon yield, the forward yield and the par yield are all the same, and all flat.


See also