variable expenses expenses that change with changes in either sales volume or sales revenue, in contrast to fixed expenses that remain the same over the short run and do not fluctuate in response to changes in sales ...
variable expenses Expenses that vary with some activity. For example, sales commissions expense and cost of goods sold will be greater when sales are greater; electricity expense will decrease when machine hours are reduced.
variable expenses property operating costs that increase with occupancy. Example: The management fee , at 5% of actual rent collections, and trash removal, at $10 per month per occupied apartment unit, are variable expenses.
Variable Expenses Those costs which vary according to the extent to which a property is occupied. For example, janitorial services in an office building.
Variable expenses - Costs that vary depending on the amount of business conducted such as manufacturing. Velocity - The rate at which money circulates through the economy.
Variable Expenses: Costs or payments that may vary from month to month, for example, gasoline or food. Variance: a special exemption of a zoning law to allow the property to be used in a manner different from an existing law.
Variable expenses - Refers to those business expenses that usually fluctuate dependent upon production or sales volume. Variable factor - An input that can be varied by any desired amount in the short run.
The key distinguishing feature of the Chepakovich valuation model is separate forecasting of fixed (or quasi-fixed) and variable expenses for the valuated company.
The contribution margin is revenues minus variable expenses. Do not confuse the contribution margin with gross profit. Gross profit is calculated after deducting all manufacturing costs associated with sold units, whether fixed or variable.
Pure No-Load Fund (finance term) Variable Expenses Managed Account (finance term) Lead Bank (in banking) ...
The equation method is a method of computing the break-even point that relies on the equation Sales = Variable expenses + fixed expenses + profit. Equity ...
Break-even analysis allows a business to understand what the minimum level of sales needed is to ensure that it does not make a loss, and how sensitive the break-even point is to changes in fixed or variable expenses.
See also: Expense, Variable cost, Contribution margin, Fixed expenses, Bills
 
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