Debt in the context of F9 always refers to debt borrowing i.e. loan stock, debentures etc.. They are interest bearing assets in the hands of investors, and the yield curve relates to interest-bearing assets (not any asset).
sir, In set 3 there’s a questio of the aggressive funding of the working capital so answer will be financing most current liability with short term finance
Yes – that is correct (and that is what the answer says when you click on it!).
Have you watched the free lectures on the financing of working capital? (The lectures are a complete free course for Paper F9 and cover everything needed to be able to pass the exam well.)
hello sir can u post MCQ of f9 to better exam preparetion because all study material are availble here just MCQ question are not kindly help me to prepretion of MCQ for f9
There is a Section A test. It will select 20 MCQ questions at random from a bank of questions. So every time you attempt it you are likely to get different questions.
We cannot supply a whole list of MCQ’s for you to practice. For this you must buy a Revision Kit from one of the ACCA approved publishers.
I THINK BPP has explained nicely ,but in short MUDARABA -is a transaction in which only one of the partners contributes capital and the other skills and expertise. MUSHARAKA-are for investments in business ventures .
Musharaka – business relationship where ALL the parties contibute to both management and business capital; while Muduraba – only one party contribute to business capital. All the other parties does is to provide management services.
In any of the relationship – business, profit are shared at a pre-agreed ratios; but losses are on the basis of the proportion of capital invested. This means that only one party take losses in Muduraba, and ALL shares the benefits and rewards in Musharaka.
Quyen12 says
Hi, can anyone see the flash cards? I click on 3 sets, but none works. Thank you
opentuition_team says
here are all flashcards
https://opentuition.com/acca/fm/acca-fm-flashcards/
Sarah says
Hi.
I would like some clarification please and thanks.
One of the flashcards in set 3 states that “The yield curve shows the relationship between the yield (return) on debt and the time to maturity.”
My study text says that the yield curve shows the relationship between the yield on an asset and the term to maturity of that same asset.
Which one is correct? Debt or asset?
Much thanks,
Sarah.
John Moffat says
Both – they mean the same thing 馃檪
Debt in the context of F9 always refers to debt borrowing i.e. loan stock, debentures etc..
They are interest bearing assets in the hands of investors, and the yield curve relates to interest-bearing assets (not any asset).
Sarah says
Thank you very much Sir. ?
John Moffat says
You are welcome 馃檪
mayola says
sir, In set 3 there’s a questio of the aggressive funding of the working capital so answer will be financing most current liability with short term finance
mayola says
is it correct sir?
John Moffat says
Yes – that is correct (and that is what the answer says when you click on it!).
Have you watched the free lectures on the financing of working capital?
(The lectures are a complete free course for Paper F9 and cover everything needed to be able to pass the exam well.)
sonia says
hello sir can u post MCQ of f9 to better exam preparetion because all study material are availble here just MCQ question are not kindly help me to prepretion of MCQ for f9
opentuition_team says
And this is? https://opentuition.com/acca/f9/f9-revision-mock-exam/
Did you check all materials on F9 page?
https://opentuition.com/acca/f9/
Please scroll all the way to the bottom of the page 馃檪
sonia says
cant find MCQ
John Moffat says
There is a Section A test. It will select 20 MCQ questions at random from a bank of questions. So every time you attempt it you are likely to get different questions.
We cannot supply a whole list of MCQ’s for you to practice. For this you must buy a Revision Kit from one of the ACCA approved publishers.
nunreel says
very nice ,but where do i get a good explanation of factoring and non -recourse factoring.please help?
John Moffat says
From our free course notes and our free lectures!
hridoy565 says
@realhams……..in muduraba one invests money other do work. in musharaka both invests and losses beard by the same amount invested
realhams says
What is the difference between MUSHARAKA and MUDURABA? Help please.
nunreel says
I THINK BPP has explained nicely ,but in short MUDARABA -is a transaction in which only one of the partners contributes capital and the other skills and expertise.
MUSHARAKA-are for investments in business ventures .
John Moffat says
If you look in our Course Notes (which you can download free), the difference is explained there.
cardine says
Musharaka – business relationship where ALL the parties contibute to both management and business capital; while Muduraba – only one party contribute to business capital. All the other parties does is to provide management services.
In any of the relationship – business, profit are shared at a pre-agreed ratios; but losses are on the basis of the proportion of capital invested. This means that only one party take losses in Muduraba, and ALL shares the benefits and rewards in Musharaka.
aunbokhari says
make strenght to basic concepts….
exnihil says
very useful