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cash flow |
Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.02 sec. |
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Cash Flow The amount of cash a company generates and uses during a period, calculated by adding non-cash charges (such as depreciation) to the net income after taxes. Cash flow can be used as an indication of a company's financial strength. Notes: Cash flow is crucial to companies, having ample cash on hand will ensure that creditors, employees, and others can be paid on time. Cash flow In investments, cash flow represents earnings before depreciation, amortization, and non-cash charges. Sometimes called cash earnings. Cash flow from operations (called funds from operations by real estate and other investment trusts) is important because it indicates the ability to pay dividends.
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We believe that farmers are going to sell old crop beans for cashflow and store the corn. Strict discipline must govern these cashflow-based investment strategies to assure their steady and consistent implementation, thereby minimizing the risk of a large forced sale of equities during a down-market cycle to pay benefit cashflows. Clearly, neither E&P nor taxable income is a good way to measure a real estate corporation's ability to pay dividends; cashflow would be a more appropriate measure. |
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