Average Annual Current Maturities

  

Categories: Bonds

Average Annual Current Maturities sounds like a way of measuring the occupancy of a nursing home. But it isn't. Instead, it's a debt term.

It describes the amount of principal on long-term debt a business expects to pay. The figure is calculated by looking at how much time remains on the original loan term. If the number is rising annually, the business is likely taking on more debt. The amount of debt can be compared to the amounts of assets or revenue the company has to determine if the company has too much debt.

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Finance: What are Revenues?73 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop what are revenues? well revenues are this magical thing.

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they happen when you sell stuff from your business. 14 opera singing [man shrugs]

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Teddy bears, forty bucks each five hundred sixty dollars. total nine custom-built

00:18

Japanese body pillows eighty bucks each seven hundred twenty dollars total. a

00:23

business so weird you can't tell your family and friends about it? [man peeks from behind a door]

00:28

priceless. revenues are what Wall Street analysts call top-line. because on an

00:33

income statement shows up right here. seems simple right? but from an

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accounting perspective revenues get recognized in different ways. like let's [accounting document shown.]

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say you sell a season pass to a golf course for five hundred bucks. on this

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golf course happens to be somewhere in the Arctic Circle so the season is only

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five months long. unless you like playing in the snow and stressing about hungry

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polar bears and are basically a complete idiot. so the customer pays you five [man golfs in the snow]

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hundred bucks up front to play as much as they want on your course. you made the

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sale of five hundred dollars on May 1st, the first day of the season, but are

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those all recognized as revenues that day? well it depends if there is no [definitions on screen]

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money-back guarantee and you keep the five hundred bucks no matter what, well

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then maybe yeah. you can recognize all of those revenues then upfront and you're

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done. but what if there's a fine print that [man and woman exchange documents]

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says if you play zero times in a month well you don't have to pay for that

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month and you get a refund at the end of the season in October.

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well you can't recognize the revenue upfront now, at least not all of it. [ATM machine]

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instead you can recognize a hundred dollars worth of revenues each time

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someone clearly plays on your course. ie even one round of golf confirms that

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they have used the hundred dollar all-you-can-eat in a month deal on your

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course. you can imagine then that well you have to reserve some kind of money [man drives golf cart]

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back refund set of payments when the season is over and you just have to

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track every single season and pass fires progress on your golf course. all right

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well the key idea here is that revenues don't necessarily equal sales,

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and that recognizing revenues usually entails that the revenues are [man smiles from golf course]

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irrevocable. that is they have passed their money-back guarantee period and

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will remain in your little piggy bank until next season. and what do you do

02:26

with all those revenues? well ever hear of polar bear repellent? yeah will do [people run from polar bear]

02:31

wonders for customer retention rates.

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