DBC 2363 - Debt
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2363
Debt
A debt is a financial obligation undertaken
by a borrower that must be repaid to the lender, usually with an additional
payment of interest.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2363
Debt
A debt is a financial obligation undertaken
by a borrower that must be repaid to the lender, usually with an additional
payment of interest.
The Banking Tutor’s Lessons
BTL 875 03-03-2026
Unearned Income and Unearned Revenue
While often used interchangeably in business accounting,
unearned income and unearned revenue carry distinct meanings depending on
whether they refer to an individual's passive earnings or a business's
accounting liabilities.
Unearned Income generally refers to passive income received
by individuals that is not derived from active employment. Examples include
dividends, interest, and inheritance.
Unearned Revenue (also called Deferred Revenue) is an
accounting term for money a business receives in advance for goods or services
it has yet to deliver. It is recorded as a liability on the balance sheet
because it represents an unmet obligation to the customer.
Key Differences at a Glance
Primary Meaning
Unearned Income (Personal Finance) - Passive income not from
work.
Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting) - Advance payments for
future delivery.
Accounting Status
Unearned Income (Personal Finance) Typically treated as
income upon receipt.
Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting) - Recorded as a
liability, not income.
Tax Treatment
Unearned Income (Personal Finance)Not subject to payroll
taxes; may have lower rates.
Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting) - Generally taxable
when received, but recognized as revenue later.
Common Examples
Unearned Income (Personal Finance) - Dividends, Interest,
Social Security, Lottery winnings.
Unearned Revenue (Business Accounting)- Prepaid
subscriptions, Retainers, Advance rent, Pre-orders.
Sekhar Pariti
+91 9440641014
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2362
Diversification
Diversification is the strategy of investing
in different asset classes and asset types to reduce portfolio risk associated
with price volatility.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2361
Positional Goods
Products that confer status and are thus both
limited in supply and carry premium prices. Examples include properties in
highly desirable residential areas, fancy sports cars and upmarket hotels.
The BankingTutor
Recap Daily Banking Concepts – February 2026
2332. Risk-return trade-off
Risk-return trade-off is a
trading principle that establishes a direct relationship between risk and
potential returns.
2333. Service Sector
The service sector of the
economy is focused on the activities that involve helping people, offering
support, or performing tasks, rather than creating or selling physical items.
2334. Credit Card
A credit card is a plastic or
metal card issued by a financial institution that allows cardholders to borrow
funds to make purchases, with the obligation to repay the borrowed funds plus
interest and fees.
2335. Consumer Packaged Goods
Consumer packaged goods (CPG)
are everyday items that consumers use regularly and often replenish.
2336. Weak Sister
A "weak sister"
describes the least dependable component in a process or group that can
undermine the whole. The term is often used in finance to describe an
underperforming investment, business, or even an economy that creates problems
for stakeholders.
2337. Equation of Exchange
The equation of exchange is
an economic identity that shows the relationship between the money supply, the
velocity of money, the price level, and an index of expenditures.
It says that the total amount
of money that changes hands in the economy will always equal the total money
value of the goods and services that change hands in the economy.
2338. Book Value
A company’s book value equals
the value of its assets remaining after accounting for its outstanding debts
and other obligations.
2339. Berkshire Hathaway
Berkshire Hathaway is a
multinational holding company led by Warren Buffett that owns a diverse array
of businesses and investments.
2340. Horizontal Acquisition
A horizontal acquisition
occurs when one company acquires another
company in the same industry and works at the same production stage. The new
entity may be well positioned because of its increased market share or scalability
than the standalone companies combined to form it. Horizontal acquisitions
expand the capacity of the acquirer, but the basic business operations remain
the same, unlike an acquisition that
creates a wholly different company.
2341. Output Gap
The term output gap refers to
the difference between the actual output of an economy and the maximum
potential output of an economy expressed
as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP). A country's output gap may be
either positive or negative.
2342. Junior Capital Pool
A junior capital pool (JCP)
is a corporate capital structure that allows early-stage startups to sell
shares in the company before actually establishing a line of business. This
form of company financing is a Canadian invention and is permitted only in Canada.
2343. Holacracy
Holacracy is a system of
corporate governance whereby members of a team or business form distinct,
autonomous, yet symbiotic, teams to accomplish tasks and company goals. The
concept of a corporate hierarchy is discarded in favor of a fluid organizational
structure where employees have the ability to make key decisions within their
own area of authority.
2344. Materiality Threshold
A materiality threshold is a
benchmark used in auditing and accounting to decide the significance of errors
or omissions in financial statements, determining if they are large enough to
influence users' economic decisions, guiding auditors to focus on important
discrepancies rather than trivial ones, often calculated as a percentage of
metrics like earnings or assets. It acts as a "filter" to ensure
transparency and relevance, with amounts exceeding the threshold deemed
"material" and requiring correction, while smaller amounts are
considered insignificant.
2345. Market Manipulation
Market manipulation is the
intentional and illegal act of artificially influencing the supply or demand of
a security to deceive investors and profit from the resulting price distortion.
2346. Insider Trading
Insider trading is the buying
or selling of a company's securities by individuals who possess material,
non-public information about that company.
2347. Affordability Index
An affordability index is a
measure of an average person’s ability to purchase a particular item, such as a
house in a particular region. It can also measure their ability to afford the
general cost of living in the region.
2348. Willie
Sutton Rule
The Willie Sutton Rule is
based on a statement by notorious American bank robber Willie Sutton, who, when
asked by a reporter about why he stole from banks, answered: “Because that's
where the money is.”
2349. KLEMS
The RBI KLEMS database is a
detailed economic dataset from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) that provides
insights into India's industrial growth and productivity, focusing on five key
inputs: Kapital, Labour, Energy, Materials, and Services (KLEMS) across 27
industries, aiding in analyzing economic performance and employment trends.
2350. Estate Planning
Estate planning is the
preparation of tasks that serves to manage an individual's asset base in the
event of their incapacitation or death.
2351. Dollar-Cost Averaging
Dollar-cost averaging is the system of regularly buying a fixed dollar amount of a specific investment, regardless of the price.
2352. Tertiary Industry
Tertiary means Third in
Order. The tertiary industry is the part of the economy that provides services
rather than producing goods, and includes medical providers, educators,
financial services, and personal services, among others.
The tertiary industry is a
technical name for the services sector of the economy, which encompasses a wide
range of businesses, including financial institutions, schools, hotels, and
restaurants.
2353. Capital Gain Tax
Capital gain tax refers to
the tax levied on the profit made from the sale of an asset, such as real
estate, stocks, or other investments.
2354. Long Put Options
A long put involves
purchasing a put option, which allows investors to potentially benefit from a
decline in the underlying asset's value.
2355. Multi Level Marketing
(MLM)
MLM is an industry worth at
least tens of billions annually where independent distributors sell products
directly to consumers and recruit others into their network, earning from both
personal sales and their downline's performance.
2356. Offer For Sale
An Offer For Sale (OFS) is a
method that allows company promoters to sell their shares to institutional and
retail investors through stock exchanges. In an OFS, existing shareholders
(typically promoters) sell their shares directly to investors without the
company issuing new shares.
2357. Goldilocks Moment
A "Goldilocks
moment" refers to an ideal situation, especially in economics, that is
"just right"—neither too extreme nor too moderate—like the fairy tale
where Goldilocks finds porridge that's not too hot, not too cold, but perfect.
2358. Cutoff Statement
A cutoff statement is a bank
statement used by auditors to verify a company's cash balance at a specific
point in time, such as the end of a fiscal year. It's a critical tool for
confirming that all transactions recorded in a company's books are accurate,
and it helps prevent errors like double-counting or missed transactions. The
term can also refer to a "cutoff date," which is the last day to
include transactions in a specific financial period.
2359. K-Shaped Recovery
A K-shaped recovery is when
segments of an economy recover from a recession at different rates.
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Pariti
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The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2360
Fear Of Missing Out (FOMO)
FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) is the pervasive
anxiety that others are having rewarding experiences, leading to a compulsive
desire to stay constantly connected with their activities. Heavily driven by
social media, this phenomenon often results in negative emotions like
loneliness, envy, and poor sleep.
The Banking Tutor
Daily
Banking Concept - 2359
K-Shaped
Recovery
A K-shaped recovery is
when segments of an economy recover from a recession at different rates.