Practice Questions
Exam-standard practice
questions.
Scenario-based and multiple choice questions for accounting qualifications. Every session picks a fresh random set.
162 question setsstarting with W
Clear filtersWasting Trust
A wasting trust is a time-limited fund that distributes depleting assets like oil or cash until exhausted.
Watered Stock
Understand watered stock, its risks, real-world examples like Enron, and how investors can detect and avoid overvalued shares.
Wealth Added Index (WAI)
Learn how the Wealth Added Index (WAI) measures true shareholder value by analyzing returns above capital costs.
Wealth Management
Learn how wealth management integrates financial planning, investments, tax, and estate strategy to grow and protect wealth efficiently.
Weighted Alpha
Discover how Weighted Alpha tracks stock momentum by emphasizing recent price movements over a 1-year period to support smarter investing.
Weighted Average Contribution Margin
Weighted Average Contribution Margin shows average profit per unit by sales mix, helping with pricing, break-even, and strategy decisions.
Weighted Average Cost Flow Assumption
Learn how Weighted Average Cost Flow Assumption works in inventory accounting with examples, pros, cons, and best practices.
Weighted Average Cost of Capital
Understand WACC: learn how to calculate weighted average cost of capital and apply it in finance, valuation, and strategy.
Weighted Average Cost of Equity (WACE)
Understand Weighted Average Cost of Equity (WACE): formula, examples, real-world use, and why it matters for investment decisions.
Weighted Average Credit Rating
A complete guide to Weighted Average Credit Rating (WACR)—learn how to calculate, apply, and evaluate portfolio credit risk.
Weighted Average Interest Rate
Learn what a weighted average interest rate is, how it’s calculated, and why it matters for managing business debt effectively.
Weighted Average Market Capitalization
Learn what Weighted Average Market Capitalization is, how to calculate it, and why it matters in index investing—simple, clear, and practical.