Numbers dressed up in fancy suits pretending to be words.
Return On Investment, the single most asked-about metric in any boardroom, and the one most likely to be fudged in a PowerPoint presentation. Every executive wants to know the ROI, and every department has a creative interpretation of what counts as a return.
Two consecutive quarters of economic decline, or as economists love to debate, maybe it's a vibe thing. During a recession, everyone becomes an armchair economist and suddenly has strong opinions about GDP, none of which are correct.
The total money a company brings in before subtracting any expenses, which is like bragging about your salary before mentioning your rent, taxes, and crippling avocado toast habit. Startups love to talk about revenue growth while conveniently forgetting to mention they spend two dollars for every dollar earned.
Return On Investment, or the question that makes every marketer break into a cold sweat during budget meetings. It's the ultimate accountability metric that everyone claims to care about but nobody can accurately measure, making it the Bigfoot of marketing.
A loan where the lender can come after your other assets if the collateral isn't enough to cover the debt—the financial equivalent of co-signing for your irresponsible cousin. Sleep tight!
The financial maneuver of moving retirement funds from one account to another without triggering tax penalties, or in web design, that satisfying hover effect that proves a button is actually clickable. In finance, it's how you avoid giving Uncle Sam a premature cut of your 401(k). The term doing double duty in completely unrelated industries, because why make jargon simple?
The minimum cushion of high-quality capital that banks must maintain relative to their risk-weighted assets, determined by regulators who learned that 'trust us' isn't adequate oversight. Your taxpayer-funded insurance against banker recklessness.
The corporate promise to pay you back for money you fronted on the company's behalf—usually after submitting three forms, two receipts, and a blood oath. It's the business world's version of "I'll get you back," except with actual paper trails and approval workflows. Pro tip: save those receipts, or prepare for disappointment.
Legally separating certain assets or operations to protect them from creditors or risks in other parts of the business. It's building financial walls to ensure that when one division explodes, it doesn't take the whole company down.
The cumulative profits a company has kept rather than distributing to shareholders as dividends—basically the corporate equivalent of money in the mattress. It's how companies fund growth without begging investors for more cash.
The process of replacing old debt with new debt, hopefully with better terms and lower interest rates, but sometimes just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. It's when you get a new loan to pay off existing loans, ideally saving money but definitely generating fees for banks. Homeowners do it to lower mortgage payments; companies do it to extend runway.
In finance, it's when you finally get your money back from investments, bonds, or that pawn shop guitar you regret selling. In real estate, it's your last-chance opportunity to reclaim property before foreclosure becomes permanent. Basically, it's the 'never mind, I'd like that back' clause in various financial and legal agreements, usually with a fee attached because nothing's ever free.
How much profit a company generates per dollar of shareholder investment, or as executives call it, the only number that matters. Because shareholders' yachts don't buy themselves.
The correction of previously issued financial statements due to errors, fraud, or accounting policy changes—corporate speak for 'we messed up, never mind what we told you before.' It's never a good sign when a company announces one.
Money returned to you after you've already paid, usually requiring more effort to claim than it's actually worth. It's the corporate world's way of saying 'we'll give you a discount, but only if you jump through these seventeen hoops first.' Beloved by marketing departments, despised by everyone who's ever lost a receipt.
Business dealings between a company and its insiders, subsidiaries, or affiliates, requiring disclosure because the potential for self-dealing is obvious. It's where conflicts of interest get documented rather than avoided.
Resources, inventory, or funds deliberately kept back for future emergencies, strategic opportunities, or that inevitable moment when everything goes sideways. In business, it's the financial equivalent of keeping a spare tire in your trunk—boring until you desperately need it. Banks love reserves; accountants worship them; entrepreneurs pretend they have them.
An estimate of accounts receivable that will never be collected, subtracted from assets to present a more realistic balance sheet. It's acknowledging that some customers are deadbeats before they officially become deadbeats.
The accounting principle determining when revenue should be recorded, which sounds simple until you encounter multi-year contracts, partial deliveries, and customers who might return products. Getting this wrong is how good companies become accounting scandals.
The danger that you won't be able to refinance maturing debt or will only be able to do so at punishing rates. The financial equivalent of your credit card's intro rate expiring at the worst possible moment.
The collective pile of money that customers owe your business, representing either healthy cash flow or an impending collections nightmare depending on who's on the list. These are debts arising from sales on credit, sitting on the balance sheet as assets while you nervously check if people will actually pay. It's optimism quantified as a line item.
The financial practice of moving money from one investment or retirement account to another without triggering tax consequences, because the IRS is generous like that. Also describes what happens to your old web design when you hover over a button, or what vehicles do in unfortunate accidents. In tech, it's that fancy effect where images change when your cursor touches them, making websites feel interactive since 1995.
The financial equivalent of calling in a responsible adult when you've made a complete mess of things—a court-appointed receiver takes control of a failing company to salvage whatever value remains for creditors. It's bankruptcy's slightly less dramatic cousin, where someone competent temporarily runs your business while you watch from the sidelines. Usually signals that things have gone very, very wrong.
The delightful process of getting your money back after you've already spent it, typically involving byzantine expense report systems and a CFO who questions why you needed that airport coffee. It's the corporate promise that 'we'll pay you back'—eventually, maybe, if you have all seventeen required receipts. The business world's version of an IOU that actually gets honored.