Not exact matches
Amortization expense for identifiable intangibles of approximately $ 18 million, or $ 0.08 per diluted common share; GAAP measures affected in this release include consolidated pretax, EPS, and segment pretax results (for each segment's amount of such am
Amortization expense for identifiable intangibles
of approximately $ 18 million, or $ 0.08 per diluted common share; GAAP measures affected in this release include consolidated pretax, EPS, and segment pretax
results (for each segment's amount
of such
amortizationamortization).
Adjusted Net Income is defined as net income excluding (i) franchise agreement
amortization, which is a non-cash expense arising as a
result of acquisition accounting that may hinder the comparability
of our operating
results to our industry peers, (ii)
amortization of deferred financing costs and debt issuance discount, a non-cash component
of interest expense, and (gains) losses on early extinguishment
of debt, which are non-cash charges that vary by the timing, terms and size
of debt financing transactions, (iii)(income) loss from equity method investments, net
of cash distributions received from equity method investments, (iv) other operating expenses (income), net, and (v) other specifically identified costs associated with non-recurring projects.
Under the Bonus Plan, our compensation committee, in its sole discretion, determines the performance goals applicable to awards, which goals may include, without limitation: attainment
of research and development milestones, sales bookings, business divestitures and acquisitions, cash flow, cash position, earnings (which may include any calculation
of earnings, including but not limited to earnings before interest and taxes, earnings before taxes, earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization and net earnings), earnings per share, net income, net profit, net sales, operating cash flow, operating expenses, operating income, operating margin, overhead or other expense reduction, product defect measures, product release timelines, productivity, profit, return on assets, return on capital, return on equity, return on investment, return on sales, revenue, revenue growth, sales
results, sales growth, stock price, time to market, total stockholder return, working capital, and individual objectives such as MBOs, peer reviews, or other subjective or objective criteria.
(3) Represents the incremental change in interest expense
resulting from the fair value adjustment
of Kraft's long - term debt in connection with the 2015 Merger, including the elimination
of the historical
amortization of deferred financing fees and
amortization of original issuance discount.
(2) Reflects 2015 Merger - related adjustments including the change to align Kraft to Kraft Heinz's accounting policy for postemployment benefit plans; incremental
amortization resulting from the fair value adjustment
of Kraft's definite - lived intangible assets; incremental compensation expense due to the fair value remeasurement
of certain
of Kraft's equity awards; and, certain deal costs related to the 2015 Merger.
Other long - term liabilities includes $ 7,634 in estimated net deferred tax liabilities,
resulting primarily from the non-deductibility
of intangible assets
amortization expense.
Expenses for retiree health benefits and workers compensation declined by $ 4.8 billion and $ 3.5 billion, respectively, but were partially offset by $ 2.4 billion in higher expenses for the
amortization of unfunded retirement benefits, the
result of statutory mandates effective for 2017 and changes in Office
of Personnel Management actuarial assumptions.
Costs decreased mainly as a
result of print distribution efficiencies as well as declines in depreciation and
amortization, raw materials and outside printing expenses.
To see how the numbers would compare if the tax deduction isn't eliminated, take the interest you would pay next year from the
amortization schedules
resulting from each set
of calculations.
Structure an agreement for the consumer that, at the conclusion
of the projected term for the consumer's participation in the debt management service agreement, would
result in negative
amortization of any
of the consumer's obligations to creditors.
* An example
of a typical extension
of credit with an adjustable rate is as follows: An amount financed
of $ 25,000 with a 5/1 ARM with a 30 year
amortization and an APR
of 4.003 % would
result in the initial fixed for five years with the possibility
of adjusting annually throughout the duration
of the loan.
You may end up paying more over the life
of your loan due to extended terms, increased interest rates, or negative
amortization (an increase in the amount you owe as a
result of not paying interest — the unpaid interest is added to your principal balance).
Back then, prepayment penalties and negative
amortization (paying less than the minimum interest so the balance went up, not down) were «fine print» parts
of ARMs and caused disastrous
results for consumers.
With these plans, it's important to note that payment caps can
result in negative
amortization during periods
of rising interest rates.
It will
result in a new payment
amortization schedule, which shows the monthly payments you need to make in order to pay off the mortgage principal and interest by the end
of the loan term.
It will also
result in a new payment
amortization schedule, which designates the monthly payments you'll need to make in order to pay off the mortgage principal and interest by the end
of the loan term.
Payment Cap A provision
of some ARM's limiting the amount by which a borrower's payments may increase regardless
of any interest rate increase; may
result in negative
amortization.
Click the «
results tab» at the bottom
of the page to see the
amortization of your debt snowball and your projected DEBT FREE Day!
So with lower monthly payments a
result of longer
amortization periods the mortgage insurers are giving the public what it's looking for apparently.
As noted by some
of the commenters, the
amortization periods account for the typical outcome that borrowers who enroll in higher - credentialed programs (e.g., bachelor's and graduate degree programs) are likely to have more loan debt than borrowers who enroll in lower - credentialed programs and, as a
result, are more likely to take longer to repay their loans.
Right, but capitalized or expensed, the
resulting value
of the intellectual property should show up on the BS as an asset (net
of amortization if capitalized).
Example: A 100,000 mortgage at 5 % interest, compounded semi-annually, with an
amortization period
of 25 years,
results in a monthly PI (principal + interest) payment
of $ 581.60 (rounded).
When that happens, part
of the principal amount is deducted,
resulting in what lenders call «negative
amortization.»
Funds from operations, which equal net income before extraordinary items plus depreciation and
amortization, often are used to express financial
results of real estate investment trusts such as Chicago - based Manufactured Home Communities.
But beware
of the minimum payment option, which can
result in negative
amortization.
An option ARM is an adjustable rate mortgage loan that has a scheduled loan payment that may
result in negative
amortization for a certain period
of time, but that expressly permits specified larger payments in the contract or servicing documents, such as an interest - only payment or a fully amortizing payment.
«Option ARM» is a term frequently used to describe adjustable rate mortgage loans that have a scheduled loan payment that may
result in negative
amortization for a certain period
of time, but that expressly permit specified larger payments in the contract or servicing documents, such as an interest - only payment or a fully amortizing payment.