Guide to Analysing Companies
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FINANCE Essencial finance
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- Deposit protection An insurance scheme into which banks pay a premium to protect depositors against loss should the bank go bust. Such D DEPOSIT PROTECTION
- Depreciation
- The straight-line method.
- The reducing balance method.
Deposit insurance
A safety net for those depositing their savings with banks. One of the first deposit insurance schemes was set up by New York State in 1829. Since then most developed countries have estab- lished schemes that protect depositors from the possibility that their bank will collapse. The risks can be real. During the Great Depression in the 1930s, more than 10,000 (admittedly small) banks in the United States went bust or closed their doors. To protect savers from losing their money, the federal deposit insurance corporation guarantees deposits up to $100,000 should the bank fail. Savers’ deposits and those of their families are aggregated so that the rules are applied fairly between depositors. In the UK, depositors get back only a pro- portion of their total savings. Does deposit insurance encourage banks to be reckless with their deposits? Yes and no. Evidence suggests that banks gen- erally collapse in countries which have unstable economies (or governments) and whose financial markets lack transparency. Some countries, such as Germany, encourage banks to snoop on each other to keep them on their best behaviour. Deposit protection An insurance scheme into which banks pay a premium to protect depositors against loss should the bank go bust. Such D DEPOSIT PROTECTION 103 01 Essential Finance 10/11/06 2:21 PM Page 103 schemes usually give limited protection, covering small deposits up to a certain fixed amount and insuring larger de- posits only up to that amount. This tempts big depositors to spread their money around several institutions to get the maximum insurance cover. The main argument against deposit protection schemes is that they give badly run institu- tions a competitive advantage. (See federal deposit insur- ance corporation.) Depreciation The effect of the passage of time (wear and tear or technical ob- solescence, for example) on the value of tangible assets such as machinery; recognition that the value of an asset at one end of an accounting year is different from its value at the other end. Accountants deduct an amount from a company’s annual profit to take account of depreciation. There are three ways of calculating depreciation for the pur- poses of a company’s books. The straight-line method. An estimated scrap value of an asset at the end of its life is subtracted from the original cost. This is then divided by the number of years of useful life that the asset is supposed to have. For example, a computer bought for $1,000 with a five-year life would be depreciated at the rate of 20% a year: Year Annual depreciation ($) Year-end value ($) 1 900 20% 180 1,000 180 820 2 900 20% 180 820 180 640 3 900 20% 180 640 180 460 4 900 20% 180 460 180 280 5 900 20% 180 280 180 100 The reducing balance method. A fixed percentage of the value of an asset last year is set aside out of profit each year. The inflation-adjusted method. This tries to take Download 1.1 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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