turnover
Từ điển Collocation
turnover noun
1 amount of business a company does
ADJ. large | low, small | company, group | aggregate, combined, total The combined turnover of both businesses has doubled in the last two years. | gross, net | annual, daily, etc. | global, worldwide | market | capital | stock
VERB + TURNOVER have | record The company recorded a turnover of £50 million last year. | boost, increase | reduce
TURNOVER + VERB be up | be down Turnover was down compared with last year's figures. | double, grow, increase, rise The firm's UK turnover increased (by) 30% to £10 million. | drop, fall, slip Turnover fell from £12 million to £11 million. | reach sth Turnover reached $2 billion in the 12 months to September. | exceed sth, top sth The company's worldwide turnover exceeds $5 billion.
TURNOVER + NOUN figure, growth, rate, tax
PHRASES a decline/fall in turnover, an increase/a rise in turnover > Special page at BUSINESS
2 rate at which people come and go from a job/place
ADJ. fast, high, rapid | low | labour, staff | population The inner city has a rapid population turnover.
VERB + TURNOVER have
Từ điển WordNet
Bloomberg Financial Glossary
交投量|营业额|成交额交投量;营业额;成交额
For mutual funds, a measure of trading activity during the previous year, expressed as a percentage of the average total assets of the fund. A turnover rate of 25% means that the value of trades represented one-fourth of the assets of the fund. For finance, the number of times a given asset, such as inventory, is replaced during the accounting period, usually a year. For corporate finance, the ratio of annual sales to net worth, representing the extent to which a company can grow without outside capital. For markets, the volume of shares traded as a percent of total shares listed during a specified period, usually a day or a year. For Great Britain, total revenue. Percentage of the total number of shares outstanding of an issue that trades during any given period.
Investopedia Financial Terms
Turnover
1. In accounting, the number of times an asset is replaced during a financial period.
2. The number of shares traded for a period as a percentage of the total shares in a portfolio or of an exchange.
Investopedia Says:
1. In accounting, turnover often refers to inventory or accounts receivable. A quick turnover is desired because it means that inventory is not sitting on the shelves for too long.
2. In a portfolio, a small turnover is desired because it means the investor is paying less in commissions to the broker. It is called "churning" when a broker unethically generates numerous trades solely in order to increase commissions.
English Synonym and Antonym Dictionary
turnovers
syn.: dollar volume employee turnover overturn turnover rate upset