Annual Basis

From CEOpedia | Management online
Revision as of 19:52, 13 December 2019 by Ceopediabot (talk | contribs) (Typos, typos fixed: Januray → January, Februrary → February, 400€ → €400 (6), annualy → annually (3), ballance → balance, correspondance → correspondence)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Annual Basis has many different collocations. In every meaning it assigns to an observed figure over the course of the year. It can be also related to:

  • the situations that happens every year,
  • an investment throughout the year,
  • cost of something during the year.

Predictions that contain the phrase "on an annual basis" mean that there is used a data of less than one year time to show the worth of returns of the whole year. In some companies owners offer salary on annual basis (Bangs D. H., 2010).

How to understand Annual Basis?

Nowadays people are used to the thing that returns or cash flows are converted on an annual basis. Investors and finance directors evidence their actions on an annual return basis. Annual return is made annually to the Registrar of Companies in correspondence with the Companies Acts. It contains details of the share capital and assets of the directors. This return has to be done until the 14th day after the date of the company's annual general meeting. In turn, the annual general meeting (AGM) is a meeting of company's shareholders which must be organized every year at intervals of not more than 15 months. The first meeting should be held in 18 months after forming the company. Most of them are formal and brief. Shareholders must be informed about the AGM 21 days before the date of the meeting. AGM contains the presentation of the audited accounts, the appointment of directors and auditors, the fixing of their remuneration, and recommendations for the payment of dividents. In annual yields are also converted volatility, loans and interest payments on deposits (Cambridge Business English Dictionary, 2011, s. 26).

Annual accounts and annual percentage rate (APR)

Annual accounts are financial statements of a company announced annually in order to comply with statutory obligation. They contain a balance sheet, profit and loss account and if possible statement of sources and application of funds. Sole traders and partnership do not have an obligation to make annual accounts. Nevertheless, accounts are necessary if they want to agree assessments raised by the Inland Revenue for taxation purposes. Annual percentage rate (APR) is an annual equivalent rate of return on a loan or investment in which the rate of interests is payable more frequently than annually. Now the law requires to specify the APR in case the interest intervals are more usual than annual (Parker R. H., 2011).

Annual basis as an example

If a family of four want to determine the whole year budget they should count how much they spend on groceries. In order to do this they must estimate the cost of groceries of e.g. three months. The assumption in this case is that the date of estimating is April 1. The family should calcutate how much money they spent on groceries in January, February, March. They noticed that the costs were: €400 in January, €200 in February and €350. The total of that months is €950. To calculate the groceries costs of the year they should multiple the costs of three months times four (€950 * 4) to determine how much they spend on groceries in the year. In this case it will be €3800 on an annual basis (Buffett W., 2014).

References

Author: Kamila Nosalska, Małgorzata Maziarz, Paulina Korpała