Business & Finance Glossary
638 terms covering intangible assets, asset valuations, fundraising, productivity metrics, private equity, venture capital, and the financial language used by founders, executives, and investors.
100-Day Plan
Absorption Rate, Accountancy, Accretion/Dilution Analysis, …
Backlog Analysis, Backlog Intangible, Balanced Scorecard, …
CAC Payback, Calibration (Valuation), Called Capital, …
Data Assets, Data Clean Room, Data Governance, …
E-Money Licence, Earn-Out, Earnback Period, …
Factoring, Fair Market Value, Fair Value Defence, …
GDPR, General Partner (GP), Generative AI, …
Headcount Efficiency, Heads of Terms, Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI), …
IAS 36 (Impairment of Assets), IAS 38 (Intangible Assets), Identified Intangible Asset, …
J-Curve, J-Curve Effect (Productivity), Joint Venture
Key Performance Indicator (KPI), Key Person Discount, Key Person Risk, …
Labour Productivity, Labour Share of Income, Large Language Model, …
Machine Learning, Machine Learning Model, Management Buy-In (MBI), …
National Income Accounting, Natural Language Processing, Negative Goodwill, …
OECD, OECD Productivity Framework, OKR (Objectives and Key Results), …
Pari Passu, Partial Goodwill Method, Patent Cliff, …
Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS), Quality of Earnings, Quality of Earnings (QoE) Report, …
Real Options Analysis, Recapitalisation, Recoverable Amount, …
S-Curve Analysis, SaaS (Software as a Service), SaaS Metrics, …
Tag-Along Rights, Tangible Asset, Tax Amortisation Benefit (TAB), …
UCC Filing, Unit Economics, Unitranche Debt, …
Valuation Multiple, Value Bridge, Value Creation Plan, …
WACC Build-Up Method, Warranties and Indemnities, Warranty and Indemnity (W&I) Insurance, …
XaaS (Everything as a Service), XML Financial Reporting (XBRL)
Year-over-Year (YoY) Growth, Yield Compression, Yield on Intangible Assets
Z-Score (Altman), Zero Trust Architecture, Zero-Based Budgeting (ZBB), …
Featured Terms
100-Day Plan
A 100-day plan is the structured programme an acquirer follows in the first roughly three months after completing an acquisition to stabilise the business and begin realising the value it paid for. It sequences the priorities: securing the key people and customers, communicating with staff, connecting essential systems and controls, and starting on the synergies that justified the deal — without disrupting what already works. The first hundred days set the tone of the integration and are where most acquisitions succeed or quietly fail, because the intangible assets a buyer paid for, from customer relationships to institutional knowledge, are most fragile in the period of change. A good 100-day plan is drafted before completion, informed by what due diligence revealed, and owned by a named integration lead. For buy-and-build acquirers it becomes a repeatable playbook applied to every bolt-on.
Read more →Absorption Rate
The rate at which a company integrates and derives value from acquired assets, particularly intangible assets such as technology, talent, and customer relationships following a merger or acquisition. A high absorption rate indicates effective post-deal value capture and is a key indicator of M&A success.
Read more →Accountancy
The profession and practice of recording, classifying, and reporting financial transactions to provide stakeholders with accurate information about an organisation's financial position. In the context of intangible assets, accountancy plays a critical role in determining how items such as goodwill, intellectual property, and customer relationships are recognised, measured, and disclosed under frameworks like IFRS and UK GAAP. Modern accountancy increasingly grapples with the challenge that traditional accounting standards were designed for tangible, physical assets and often fail to capture the true value of knowledge-based and innovation-driven businesses. As intangible assets now represent the majority of enterprise value in most sectors, the accountancy profession is evolving to address valuation, impairment testing, and disclosure requirements for these non-physical assets.
Read more →Accretion/Dilution Analysis
A financial analysis used in M&A to determine whether a proposed acquisition will increase (accrete) or decrease (dilute) the acquirer's earnings per share. This analysis is particularly sensitive to how acquired intangible assets are valued and amortised post-transaction.
Read more →Acquiring Bank
A financial institution licensed by card networks (Visa, Mastercard) to process payment card transactions on behalf of merchants, also known as a merchant acquirer. The acquiring bank maintains the merchant's account, underwrites the merchant's credit risk, settles funds from card transactions, and ensures compliance with card network rules and PCI DSS security standards. Acquiring banks earn revenue through merchant discount rates and are a fundamental component of the four-party card payment model.
Read more →Acquisition Finance
Acquisition finance is the funding an acquirer uses to buy a business. It usually combines several layers into a capital stack: the buyer's own cash or equity; senior bank debt, often secured on the target's assets and cash flows; asset-based lending against receivables, stock or plant; and increasingly IP-backed lending against intangible assets such as patents, software and brands. Sellers themselves frequently provide part of the funding through vendor loan notes or deferred consideration, and earn-outs act as a form of contingent finance. Lenders size their support against the target's serviceable cash flow and the quality of the assets available as security, so a business with well-documented, valuable intangible assets can widen an acquirer's borrowing options. In the UK, IP-backed lending for smaller and mid-sized deals has developed further than in most markets, making the intangible base of a target directly relevant to how a deal can be funded.
Read more →Acquisition Method
The required accounting method for business combinations under IFRS 3 and ASC 805, which involves identifying the acquirer, determining the acquisition date, recognising and measuring the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed at fair value, and recognising goodwill or a gain from a bargain purchase. The acquisition method replaced the previously permitted pooling of interests method and ensures that all identifiable intangible assets are separately recognised at fair value on the acquirer's balance sheet.
Read more →Add-On Acquisition
An acquisition made by an existing portfolio company to expand its scale, capabilities, or market presence, often used interchangeably with bolt-on acquisition in private equity contexts. Add-on acquisitions may range from small tuck-in deals that fill specific gaps to larger transformative transactions that materially change the portfolio company's competitive position. The add-on strategy enables PE-backed platforms to grow faster than organic growth alone would permit.
Read more →Adjusted EBITDA
A modified version of EBITDA that strips out non-recurring, irregular, or non-cash items to present a clearer picture of ongoing operational performance. Adjusted EBITDA is commonly used in growth-stage company valuations where standard EBITDA may be distorted by one-off charges or share-based compensation.
Read more →Adjusted Net Asset Method
A valuation approach that estimates the value of a business by adjusting the book values of all assets and liabilities to their fair values, including the recognition of off-balance-sheet intangible assets that meet IFRS 3 or ASC 805 recognition criteria. The adjusted net asset method is primarily used for asset-holding companies, investment vehicles, and businesses where value resides primarily in the asset base rather than earnings capacity. It provides a floor value for operating businesses.
Read more →Advance Rate
An advance rate is the percentage of an asset's assessed value that a lender will actually lend against, converting collateral quality into a realistic borrowing limit. It is the discipline at the heart of advance rate lending: the gap between the asset's value and the amount advanced is the lender's cushion against realisation shortfalls, disposal costs and the time it takes to sell on default. Advance rates vary by asset class and quality. In asset-based lending, indicative ranges are receivables at 70 to 90 per cent, inventory at around 40 to 65 per cent of cost or up to 80 to 90 per cent of net orderly liquidation value, and plant and equipment at roughly 50 to 80 per cent of orderly-liquidation value. Intangibles sit at the cautious end. In broader-market IP lending, loan-to-values of around 20 to 40 per cent are common, rising towards 50 per cent where the exposure is insurance-backed; NatWest's High Growth IP Loan, for instance, advances up to around half of appraised IP value, revalued annually by an independent valuer. The advance rate on IP reflects the blended view of separability, saleability and legal strength applied to an orderly-disposal value, so registered rights with clean, unencumbered title and paid renewals support a higher rate than unregistered or contested ones. A UK example: an SME with £2m of appraised patents and trade marks might see an advance in the low-to-mid hundreds of thousands as an IP element within a wider facility, the conservative rate reflecting the illiquidity of the rights. These figures are indicative of general practice, not guarantees. The advance rate matters because it directly determines availability within the borrowing base and, together with operating cash flow serviceability, keeps the facility prudently sized and defensible if the borrower defaults.
Read more →AI Agent
An autonomous software system that uses artificial intelligence to perceive its environment, make decisions, and take actions to achieve specified goals with minimal human intervention. AI agents are increasingly deployed in customer service, workflow automation, and decision support, and represent a growing category of operational intangible asset.
Read more →AI Ethics
The branch of applied ethics concerned with the moral implications of designing, deploying, and using artificial intelligence systems. AI ethics addresses issues including fairness, transparency, privacy, accountability, and the societal impact of automation. Organisations with robust AI ethics frameworks are better positioned to manage regulatory risk and maintain stakeholder trust.
Read more →AI Governance
The framework of policies, procedures, and organisational structures that guide the responsible development, deployment, and monitoring of artificial intelligence systems. AI governance encompasses risk management, ethical guidelines, regulatory compliance, model validation, and accountability mechanisms. Robust AI governance is increasingly a prerequisite for enterprise AI adoption and regulatory approval.
Read more →AI Hallucination
An output generated by an artificial intelligence system — particularly large language models — that is factually incorrect, fabricated, or nonsensical, yet presented with apparent confidence. AI hallucinations pose significant risks in applications such as legal research, medical advice, and financial analysis, and their mitigation through grounding, retrieval-augmented generation, and human oversight is a key challenge in enterprise AI deployment.
Read more →Algorithmic Bias
Systematic and repeatable errors in an AI system's outputs that create unfair outcomes for particular groups, typically arising from biased training data, flawed model design, or unrepresentative sampling. Algorithmic bias poses significant reputational, legal, and regulatory risks, and its identification and mitigation are core components of responsible AI governance.
Read more →Allocative Efficiency
The extent to which resources are distributed to their highest-value uses across an economy or within a firm. In growth accounting, improvements in allocative efficiency — particularly the reallocation of capital toward intangible-intensive activities — are a significant driver of productivity gains.
Read more →Amortisation
The gradual write-off of an intangible asset's cost over its useful life. Unlike depreciation (which applies to physical assets), amortisation spreads the expense of assets such as patents, software, and licences across the income statement over the period they generate value.
Read more →Angel Investor
A high-net-worth individual who provides early-stage capital to startups in exchange for equity or convertible debt. Angel investors typically invest their own money and often contribute mentorship and industry connections alongside funding. Angel investors play a critical role in funding early-stage companies where value is primarily concentrated in intangible assets such as intellectual property, founding team expertise, and market opportunity.
Read more →Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR)
The annualised value of recurring subscription revenue. ARR is the primary top-line metric for SaaS and subscription businesses, providing a normalised view of predictable revenue that strips out one-time fees and variable charges. ARR is a critical input in SaaS valuation models, where enterprise value is often expressed as a multiple of ARR, with higher multiples awarded to businesses demonstrating strong net revenue retention and efficient growth.
Read more →Anti-Bribery
The body of laws and corporate policies designed to prevent the offering, giving, soliciting, or accepting of bribes in commercial and public transactions. The UK Bribery Act 2010 is among the strictest globally, creating a corporate offence of failing to prevent bribery with a defence only for organisations that can demonstrate adequate procedures. The US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) similarly prohibits bribing foreign officials.
Read more →Anti-Dilution Protection
A clause in an investment agreement that protects existing investors from ownership dilution if the company raises a subsequent round at a lower valuation (a down round). Common mechanisms include full ratchet and weighted-average anti-dilution. Anti-dilution provisions are particularly relevant in intangible-rich companies, where valuations may fluctuate significantly as the commercial potential of intellectual property, technology, and brand assets becomes clearer over time.
Read more →Anti-Money Laundering (AML)
The body of laws, regulations, and procedures designed to prevent criminals from disguising illegally obtained funds as legitimate income. AML compliance requires financial institutions to implement customer due diligence, transaction monitoring, suspicious activity reporting, and record-keeping. Key legislation includes the EU Anti-Money Laundering Directives, the UK Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, and the US Bank Secrecy Act.
Read more →API Economy
The ecosystem of business models, partnerships, and revenue streams enabled by application programming interfaces that allow software systems to communicate and share data. APIs enable companies to monetise their data and functionality, create platform ecosystems, and embed services into third-party applications. API-first strategies are increasingly central to digital business models and represent valuable technology intangible assets.
Read more →Apprenticeship
A structured programme combining on-the-job training with formal education, enabling individuals to develop industry-specific skills while earning a wage. Apprenticeships represent a significant investment in human capital formation and are increasingly recognised as intangible assets at the organisational level. Companies that invest in apprenticeship programmes build proprietary knowledge, develop firm-specific skills in their workforce, and create a pipeline of talent that strengthens long-term competitive advantage. In the United Kingdom, the Apprenticeship Levy requires large employers to invest in training, effectively mandating intangible capital formation. From a productivity perspective, well-designed apprenticeship programmes accelerate the development of tacit knowledge — the experiential, hard-to-codify expertise that drives operational excellence and innovation.
Read more →Artificial Intelligence (AI)
A branch of computer science focused on creating systems capable of performing tasks that typically require human intelligence, including learning, reasoning, problem-solving, perception, and natural language understanding. As an intangible asset, AI encompasses trained models, proprietary algorithms, curated training datasets, and the institutional knowledge embedded in an organisation's AI capabilities. AI systems are increasingly recognised as high-value intangible assets in mergers and acquisitions, with purchase price allocations identifying trained models, datasets, and AI-powered products as separately identifiable intangible assets under IFRS 3 and ASC 805. The valuation of AI assets presents unique challenges due to rapid technological change, dependence on training data quality, and the difficulty of separating AI value from the human expertise required to develop and maintain it.
Read more →ASC 350 (Intangibles — Goodwill and Other)
The US GAAP standard governing the subsequent measurement of goodwill and other intangible assets after initial recognition in a business combination. ASC 350 requires annual impairment testing of goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets, permits an optional qualitative assessment before performing the quantitative impairment test, and provides guidance on the amortisation of finite-lived intangible assets. The 2017 simplification eliminated the second step of the goodwill impairment test, reducing complexity by measuring impairment as the excess of carrying amount over fair value of the reporting unit.
Read more →ASC 360 (Property, Plant, and Equipment)
The US GAAP standard governing the recognition, measurement, and impairment of long-lived tangible and certain intangible assets. ASC 360 requires a two-step impairment test: first, a recoverability test comparing undiscounted future cash flows to carrying value; second, if impairment is indicated, measurement of the loss as the excess of carrying value over fair value. Unlike IAS 36, ASC 360 does not permit reversal of impairment losses on assets held and used.
Read more →ASC 730
The US GAAP standard requiring immediate expensing of research and development costs as incurred. ASC 730 is the structural source of the gap between statutory and capitalisation-reclassified EBITDA for US-headquartered companies: virtually no R&D is permitted on the balance sheet, regardless of stage, evidence quality, or commercial proximity. Narrow exceptions apply for internal-use software (ASC 350-40) and software for sale (ASC 985-20). The 2025 Internal Revenue Code §174A reform restored immediate tax-expensing for domestic R&D after the 2022 capitalisation requirement, but the financial-reporting treatment under ASC 730 remains expense-only. The contrast with IFRS / IAS 38 — which permits capitalisation of development costs once six criteria are met — means the management-accounting reclassification gap is structurally larger for US-reporting companies than for IFRS-reporting equivalents. PE/VC funds underwriting US targets routinely build the proxy capitalisation themselves; founders who arrive with the bridge already documented front-run the markdown logic.
Read more →ASC 820 (Fair Value Measurement)
The US GAAP standard that defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value, and requires disclosures about fair value measurements. ASC 820 defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. It establishes a three-level fair value hierarchy: Level 1 (quoted prices in active markets), Level 2 (observable inputs), and Level 3 (unobservable inputs). ASC 820 is the US counterpart to IFRS 13.
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