Course glossary
Here are some worlds which should be familiar for you till the end of the course, try to cover them when you will have free time.
Special | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | ALL
B |
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B2BBusiness to business. | |
B2CBusiness to consumer | |
Balance sheetA ‘snapshot’ of a company’s assets, liabilities and capital at a particular point in time. | |
Base rateSet each month by the Bank of England, this is the country’s base rate of interest. This influences financial products and services when they set their own cost of borrowing. | |
BenchmarkingChecking your company’s standards by comparing them with certain criteria, e.g. a competitor’s activities. | |
Bid-offer spreadThe buying (offer) and selling (bid) price of shares, bonds or currency. The ‘spread’ is the difference between those two prices. | |
Black swanFinancial events that are difficult to predict. It is called this because before people ventured to Australia, swans were assumed to only be white. No one had seen a black one until then. | |
Blue chipThis term originates from poker as blue chips are traditionally the highest-valued. Therefore, a blue-chip company is one that is large and considered to be safe or prestigious. | |
BootstrappingBuilding a start-up company with very little money, often relying on personal savings and pushing for the lowest possible operating costs, while implementing cost-saving systems such as fast inventory turnaround. Making a forecast beyond a certain period by using the forecasted data for that period. | |
Break-even pointThe point in time when you will have paid back all your debts, or when revenues exactly match expenses. | |
Bridging loanThis loan is taken out by people who need access to finance while their property is being sold. | |
Business angelAlso known as an angel investor. An individual who provides capital for a business start-up in return for a stake in the company. | |
Business cycleThe tendency for economies to experience peaks and troughs that follows a cyclical pattern – known colloquially as ‘boom and bust’. Governments are tasked with smoothing the peaks and troughs and limiting the effect of these cycles on consumers and businesses. | |