STAYCATION
Staycation is a term that comes from the words ‘stay’ and ‘vacation’. This means that the vacation was spent where you stay or near your home. The popularity of staycations soared recently with people trying to save money, avoiding traffic, and exploiting city destinations.
POPULAR TERMS
Dynasty Trust
Long-term trusts made to pass wealth from one generation to another without paying transfer taxes including estate and gift taxes. The trust can su ...
C&I
Loan made to a business or company, not to an individual, which provides either working capital or finances key capital expenditures. Usually short ...
Hypermarket
Hypermarket is a combination of a department store and a grocery supermarket. A hypermarket offers various products like clothing, groceries, and a ...
Assets Under Management
The asset's market value which an investment company handles on behalf of investors. Assets Under Management (AUM) is perceived as a scale of s ...
Business Income Coverage Form
Insurance policy which covers a loss of income a firm incurs due to a slowdown or temporary suspension of its operations because if damage to its p ...
POPULAR ARTICLE
SEE FOREX TUTORIAL
A Guide to Your Personal Income Tax: Last-Minute Moves
December 31 is fast approaching. The next thing you know you need to file your income tax return. So before you get swarmed by the hustle and bustl ...
Digesting Financial Statements: Working Capital
Analysts and investors look at the working capital and its trends to measure a company’s financial performance. This metric determines a busi ...
Digesting Financial Statements: Cash Flow
Companies generate money from borrowers and/or borrow money from creditors. Next, firms purchase assets and/or finance projects and programs. Then, ...
Student Loans: Repayment in Times of Financial Difficulty
One day, you are in the middle of a financial hardship. Unfortunately, you still have student loans to pay. What will you do? In times like these, ...
Digesting Financial Statements: Long-Lasting Liabilities
Long-lived liabilities refer to obligations which are due more than a year. Some examples of long-term debt include convertible bond and capital le ...
ECONOMIC CALENDAR
| Time | Country | Indices | Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| 02:01 | Rightmove House Prices | Mar | |
| 04:00 | Fixed Asset Investment | Feb | |
| 04:00 | Industrial production | Feb | |
| 04:00 | Retail Sales | Feb | |
| 04:00 | Unemployment Rate | Feb | |
| 04:00 | NBS Press Conference | ||
| 14:15 | Housing Starts | Feb | |
| 14:30 | Consumer Price Index | Feb | |
| 14:30 | Consumer Price Index Core | Feb |


