amortised in Czech

amortised <v.> amortizoval Entry edited by: B2

Sentence patterns related to "amortised"

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1. Amortised synonyms, Amortised pronunciation, Amortised translation, English dictionary definition of Amortised

2. Amortised cost

3. Amortised cost at subsequent periods: a numerical example Amortised cost and EIR calculations Example Amortised cost and EIR calculations

4. Imperative amortise Present I amortise you amortise he/she/it Amortises we amortise you amortise they amortise Preterite I amortised you amortised he/she/it amortised we amortised you amortised they amortised Present Continuous I am amortising you are amortising he/she/it is amortising we are amortising you are amortising they are amortising Present Perfect I have amortised you have …

5. What are synonyms for Amortised?

6. Synonyms for Amortised in Free Thesaurus

7. Amortised cost Amortised cost is present value of future cash flows using effective interest rate

8. Amortised time doesn't have to be constant; you can have linear and logarithmic Amortised time or whatever else

9. Title: Amortised MAP Inference for Image Super-resolution

10. — amortised cost of a financial asset or financial liability,

11. 41.1 Fair value hierarchy: financial instruments at amortised cost

12. A financial asset is measured at Amortised cost if both of

13. Change in accrued interest and amortised cost on loans and receivables

14. Premiums and Discounts are amortised over the life of the instruments.

15. (ii) Financial liabilities measured at Amortised cost Financial liabilities that are not classified as fair value through profit or loss fall into this category and are measured at Amortised cost

16. Change in accrued interest and amortised cost on held-to-maturity financial assets

17. Essentially Amortised time means "average time taken per operation, if you do many operations"

18. Firstly, the Amortised cost is determined in the foreign currency in which the item is denominated

19. Loans and receivables and held-to-maturity investments are carried at amortised cost using the effective interest method

20. Gross carrying amount is the Amortised cost of a financial asset before adjusting for any loss allowance

21. Amortise (third-person singular simple present Amortises, present participle amortising, simple past and past participle Amortised) (British spelling) Alternative form of amortize

22. Past participle: Amortised Gerund: amortising Imperative Amortise Amortise Present I Amortise you Amortise he/she/it Amortises we Amortise you Amortise they

23. Amortise ( third-person singular simple present Amortises, present participle amortising, simple past and past participle amortised ) ( British spelling) Alternative form of amortize quotations

24. The financial liabilities measured at Amortised cost are deposits from customers, deposits and placement from banks and other financial institutions, repurchase agreement, bills payable, other

25. The following example illustrates the principles underlying the calculation of the Amortised cost and the effective interest rate for a fixed-rate financial asset:

26. ‘amortised cost method’ means a valuation method which takes the acquisition cost of an asset and adjusts this value for amortisation of premiums (or discounts) until maturity;

27. ‘amortised cost accounting’ means an accounting approach which considers the acquisition cost of the security and adjusts this value for amortisation of premiums or discounts until maturity.

28. Entries with "Amortises" amortise: amortise (English) Verb amortise (third-person singular simple present Amortises, present participle amortising, simple past and past participle amortised) Alternative form…

29. ‘amortised cost method’ means a valuation method which takes the acquisition cost of an asset and adjusts that value for amortisation of premiums or discounts until maturity;

30. On 5 November 2009 the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) published for public comment an exposure draft on Amortised cost measurement and impairment of financial instruments

31. Amortised cost A financial asset is classified as measured at Amortised cost where: (a) the financial asset is held within a business model whose objective is to hold financial assets in order to collect contractual cash flows (the business model test) and (the purpose is to hold the asset to collect the contractual cash flows rather than to sell it prior to maturity to realise its fair value

32. (11) “amortised cost method” means a valuation method which takes the acquisition cost of an asset and adjusts this value for amortisation of premiums (or discounts) until maturity;

33. Also any benefits were diluted by the fact that machinery was amortised over a number of years (usually 10) and therefore the benefit to the investigation period was correspondingly reduced.

34. This is a method of calculating the amortised cost of a financial asset or a financial liability and of allocating the interest income or interest expense over the relevant period.

35. Amortised cost is the amount at which some financial assets or liabilities are measured and consists of: initial recognition amount, subsequent recognition of interest income/expense using the effective interest method, repayments and; credit losses.

36. Effective interest method is the method that is used in the calculation of the Amortised cost of a financial asset/liability and in the allocation and recognition of the interest revenue or interest expense in P/L over the relevant period.

37. The effective interest method is a method of calculating the amortised cost of a financial asset or a financial liability (or group of financial assets or financial liabilities) and of allocating the interest income or interest expense over the relevant period.

38. Amortise Past participle: Amortised Gerund: amortising Imperative Present Preterite Present Continuous Present Perfect Past Continuous Past Perfect Future Future Perfect Future Continuous Present Perfect Continuous Future Perfect Continuous Past Perfect Continuous Conditional Past Conditional Imperative amortise amortise Present I amortise you amortise

39. ‘To Amortize that investment, it is desirable that a given facility be designed to serve for several ecosystem generations.’ ‘The insurer said the new method reduced its life insurance reserve and allows its policy acquisition costs to be amortised on a more level basis over the life of the insurance contracts.’

40. "10% CORRIDOR" APPROACH Net cumulative unrecognised actuarial gains and losses which exceed the greater of (a) 10% of the present value of the defined benefit obligation and (b) 10% of the fair value of plan assets, are to be amortised over the expected average remaining working lives of the participating employees.

41. In other words, the change in value is not recognised for assets carried at cost or amortised cost; it is recognised in profit or loss for assets classified as financial assets at fair value through profit or loss; and it is ►M5 recognised in other comprehensive income ◄ for assets classified as available for sale.

42. [CC202.440] Intellectual property If the vendor incurs capital expenditure in acquiring or developing an Australian patent, registered design or copyright, and Amortises that expenditure over the effective life of the intellectual property and claimed an income tax deduction, the price apportioned for that property should not exceed the amortised value in the vendor’s books.

43. 57 If an entity recognises financial assets using settlement date accounting (see paragraph 38 and Appendix A paragraphs AG53 and AG56), any change in the fair value of the asset to be received during the period between the trade date and the settlement date is not recognised for assets carried at cost or amortised cost (other than impairment losses).

44. where a financial asset is reclassified out of the amortised cost measurement category and into the fair value through profit or loss accounting portfolio [IFRS 9.5.6.2], gains or losses due to the reclassification shall be reported in “Gains or (-) losses on financial assets and liabilities held for trading, net” or “Gains or (-) losses on non-trading financial assets mandatorily at fair value through profit or loss, net”, as applicable;

45. Those requirements can create a measurement or recognition inconsistency (sometimes referred to as an ‘accounting mismatch’) when, for example, in the absence of designation as at fair value through profit or loss, a financial asset would be classified as available for sale (with most changes in fair value ►M5 recognised in other comprehensive income ◄ ) and a liability the entity considers related would be measured at amortised cost (with changes in fair value not recognised).