Outline of finance

The following outline provides an overview and topical guide to finance:

Finance – the field concerned with how individuals, businesses, and organizations raise, allocate, and manage monetary resources over time, while accounting for the risks associated with their activities and investments.

Overview

The term finance may incorporate any of the following:

Fundamental financial concepts

  • Finance – Academic discipline studying businesses and investments
    • Arbitrage – Capitalisation of risk-free opportunities in financial markets
    • Capital (economics) – Already-produced durable goods that are used in production of goods or services
    • Capital asset pricing model – Finance model linking expected return to systematic risk
    • Cash flow – Movement of money into or out of a business, project, or financial product
    • Cash flow matching – Strategy aligning asset cash inflows with liability outflows
    • Debt – Obligation to pay borrowed money
    • Asset types
      • Real estate – Land, including its buildings and resources
      • Securities – Tradable financial asset
      • Commodities – Fungible item produced to satisfy wants or needs
      • Futures – Standardised contract to buy or sell an asset at a future date
      • Cash – Physical currency and other immediately accessible liquid assets
    • Discounted cash flow – Method of valuing a project, company, or asset
    • Financial capital – Economic resources used to buy what is needed to make products or provide services
      • Funding – Act of providing resources
    • Entrepreneur – Person who owns and operates a business
    • Fixed income analysis – Process of valuing debt securities by assessing their risk and return
    • Gap financing – Short-term loan covering the gap between available funds and total financing needs
    • Global financial system – Global framework for capital flows
    • Hedge – Investment position used to offset potential losses in another asset
      • Basis risk – Risk that a hedge and its underlying asset do not move perfectly together
    • Interest rate – Percentage of a sum of money charged for its use
    • Short-rate model – Interest-rate model describing the stochastic evolution of the instantaneous short rate
    • Interest – Sum paid for the use of money
    • Investment – Set of actions with the intent of earning profit
    • Leverage – Use of borrowed funds in the purchase of an asset
    • Long (finance) – Position in a financial instrument in which the holder owns a positive amount
    • Liquidity
    • Margin (finance) – Type of financial collateral used to cover credit risk
    • Mark to market – Accounting method valuing assets and liabilities at current market prices
    • Market impact – Concept in economics
    • Medium of exchange – Method by which value is transferred between parties
    • Microcredit – Small loans to impoverished borrowers
    • Money – Object or record accepted as payment
      • Money creation – Process by which the money supply of an economic region is increased
      • Currency – Standardization of money
      • Coin – Small, flat and usually round piece of material used as money
      • Banknote – Paper money issued by a bank
      • Counterfeit – Making a copy or imitation which is represented as the original
      • History of money
      • Monetary reform – Movements to amend the financial system
    • Portfolio – Financial term for a collection of investments
    • Reference rate – Benchmark interest rate used to price loans and financial contracts
    • Return – Finance term; profit on an investment
    • Risk – Possibility of something bad happening
    • Scenario analysis – Futures studies / Futures techniques method
    • Short (finance) – Selling unowned financial securities
    • Speculation – Engaging in risky financial transactions
      • Day trading – Buying and selling financial instruments within the same trading day
    • Position trader – Standardised contract to buy or sell an asset at a future date
    • Spread trade – Type of financial purchase on securities
    • Standard of deferred payment – Debt valuation in economics
    • Store of value – Property that money is useful later
    • Time horizon, also known as planning horizon – Planned duration over which an investment or decision is expected to be held
    • Time value of money – Better to receive money now than later
      • Discounting – When a creditor delays payments from a debtor in exchange for a fee
      • Present value (PV), also known as Present Discounted Value (PDV) – Current worth of a future sum discounted to today
      • Future value – Value of an asset at a specific date
      • Net present value – Valuation in finance
      • Internal rate of return – Method of calculating an investment's rate of return
      • Modified internal rate of return – Measure of an investment's attractiveness
      • Annuity – Series of payments made at equal intervals
      • Perpetuity – Annuity with payments made at equal intervals indefinitely
    • Trade – Exchange of goods and services
      • Free trade – Absence of government restriction on international trade
      • Free market – Form of market-based economy
      • Fair trade – Sustainable and equitable trade
    • Unit of account – Standard numerical measure used to value and compare goods and services
    • Volatility – Degree of variation of a trading price series over time
    • Yield – Income return on an investment expressed as a percentage of its value
    • Yield curve – Relationships among bond yields of different maturities
    • Equated monthly installment – Loan repayment variant
    • Down payment – Upfront partial payment for the purchase of something expensive

History

Finance terms by field

Accounting (financial record keeping)

  • Auditing – Independent examination of an organization
  • Accounting software – Computer program that maintains account books
  • Book keeping – Recording financial transactions or events
  • FASB – Private US organization for accounting
  • Financial accountancy – Field of accounting
  • Management accounting – Field of business administration, part of the internal accounting system of a company
  • Philosophy of Accounting – Conceptual framework
  • Hedge accounting – Accounting method aligning hedging gains and losses with the hedged item
    • IFRS 9 – Accounting standard
    • Fair value accounting – Accounting method valuing assets and liabilities at current market prices

Banking

Corporate finance

Investment management

Personal finance

Public finance

  • Central bank – Government body that manages currency and monetary policy
  • Federal Reserve – Central banking system of the US
  • Fractional-reserve banking – Banking system where institutions hold only a fraction of deposits as reserves
    • Deposit creation multiplier – Process by which the money supply of an economic region is increased
  • Tax – Compulsory contribution to state revenue
    • Capital gains tax – Tax on investment profits
    • Estate tax – Tax paid after inheritance of property
    • inheritance tax – Tax paid after inheritance of property
    • Gift tax – Tax on money or property that one living person gives to another
    • Income tax – Tax based on taxable income
    • Inheritance tax – Tax paid after inheritance of property
    • Payroll tax – Tax imposed on employers or employees
    • Property tax – Tax on property, particularly real estate
    • land value tax – Levy on the unimproved value of land
    • Sales tax – Tax on the sales of certain goods and services
    • value added tax – Form of consumption tax
    • excise tax – Goods tax levied at the moment of manufacture rather than sale
    • use tax – Type of tax in the United States
    • Transfer tax – Tax on the transfer of property or assets between parties
    • stamp duty – Tax levied on property purchases or documents
    • Tax advantage – Financial incentive
    • Tax, tariff and trade – Compulsory contribution to state revenue
    • Tax amortization benefit – Savings resulting from amortization
  • Crowding out – Reduction in private investment caused by increased government borrowing
  • Industrial policy – Government strategy promoting industrial development
  • Agricultural policy – Laws relating to domestic agriculture and foreign-imported agricultural products
  • Currency union – Agreement involving states sharing a single currency
  • Monetary reform – Movements to amend the financial system

Risk management

Constraint finance

  • Environmental finance – Field of finance focused on environmental policy
  • Feminist economics – Gender-aware branch of economics
  • Green economics – Economy based on ecological economics
  • Islamic economics – Handling of economics based on Islamic jurisprudence
  • Uneconomic growth – Economic growth that reflects or creates a decline in the quality of life
  • Value of Earth – Economical estimate of the net worth of the planet
  • Value of life – Economic measure placing a monetary value on reducing the risk of death

Insurance

Economics and finance

Corporate finance theory

Asset pricing theory

Asset pricing models

Mathematics and finance

Time value of money

Financial mathematics

Mathematical tools

Derivatives pricing

Portfolio mathematics

Financial markets

Market and instruments

Equity market

Equity valuation

Investment theory

Bond market

Money market

Commodity market

Derivatives market

Forward markets and contracts

Futures markets and contracts

Option markets and contracts

Swap markets and contracts

Derivative markets by underlyings

Equity derivatives
Interest rate derivatives
Credit derivatives
Foreign exchange derivative

Financial regulation

Designations and accreditation

Litigation

Fraud

Industry bodies

Regulatory and supervisory bodies

International

European Union

Regulatory bodies by country

United Kingdom
United States

United States legislation

Actuarial topics

Valuation

Underlying theory

Context

Considerations

Discounted cash flow valuation

Relative valuation

Contingent claim valuation

Other approaches

Financial modeling

Portfolio theory

General concepts

Modern portfolio theory

Post-modern portfolio theory

Performance measurement

Mathematical techniques

Quantitative investing

Financial software tools

Financial modeling applications

Corporate Finance

Quantitative finance

Financial institutions

Financial institutions

Education

See also

References

  1. ^ Joel G. Siegel; Jae K. Shim; Stephen Hartman (1 November 1997). Schaum's quick guide to business formulas: 201 decision-making tools for business, finance, and accounting students. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-058031-2. Retrieved 12 November 2011. §39 "Corporate Planning Models". See also, §294 "Simulation Model".
  2. ^ See for example: Low, R.K.Y.; Faff, R.; Aas, K. (2016). "Enhancing mean–variance portfolio selection by modeling distributional asymmetries" (PDF). Journal of Economics and Business. 85: 49–72. doi:10.1016/j.jeconbus.2016.01.003.; Low, R.K.Y.; Alcock, J.; Faff, R.; Brailsford, T. (2013). "Canonical vine copulas in the context of modern portfolio management: Are they worth it?" (PDF). Journal of Banking & Finance. 37 (8): 3085–3099. doi:10.1016/j.jbankfin.2013.02.036. S2CID 154138333.