Definitions
1. The deceptive practice of some mutual funds, in which recently weak stocks are sold and recently strong stocks are bought just before the fund's holdings are made public, in order to give the appearance that they've been holding good stocks all along.
2. The deceptive practice of using accounting tricks to make a company's balance sheet and income statement appear better than they really are.
Window dressing refers to actions taken or not taken prior to issuing
financial statements in order to improve the appearance of the
financial statements.
Here is an example of window dressing. A company operates throughout
the year with a negative balance in its general ledger Cash account.
(Its balance at the bank is positive due to the time it takes for its
checks to clear its bank account.) Since the financial statements
report the Cash amount appearing in its general ledger account, the
financial statements would report a negative amount of Cash.
However, the company does not want its December 31 balance sheet to
report a negative cash balance, since it will be reviewed by
many outsiders. To avoid reporting a negative cash balance the company
does not make the payments for amounts that should be paid between
December 26 and December 31. This postponement of payments allows its
book amount of Cash to temporarily be a positive amount. Then on January
2, the company issues checks for all of the amounts that normally would
have been paid at the end of December.
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