Find capital loss Experts and capital loss Expert Witnesses at www.findexperts.com. Find capital loss Experts and capital loss Expert Witnesses at www.findexperts.com.
  Home Store Join Expert Login Terms/Policy Faq Logout
          Find an Expert by "keyword" Location: Submit "keyword": To search by category:
       Expert Witness
Expert Witness

Capital Loss Experts Witnesses - Capital Loss Forensic Consultants.

Find Capital Loss experts and consultants for Capital Loss litigation support. Available to be Capital Loss expert witnesses and provide Capital Loss forensic consulting in Capital Loss litigation, in addition prepare Capital Loss expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.


Found   19   capital loss Experts and Expert Witnesses.

Expert # 1,914   Capital Loss Expert Miami, FL
We consult and write HMO reinsurance, employer stop loss, provider excess loss reinsurance, Broker or agent fiduciary, and audit reinsurance claims. Automatic Facultative, and Quota Share reinsurance policies & treaties....   
Expert # 108   Capital Loss Expert Charlotte, NC
30 years of real estate experience with emphasis on Property Mangagement - purchase, renovation, restoration, sale of single family homes, condominiums, multifamily residences   
Expert # 7,474   Capital Loss Expert Haddonfield, NJ
Valuations of businesses, corporate securities and intangibles. Loss-of-business damages analysis. Established 1977. Staff designations include ASA, CFA, CPA and MBA.   
Expert # 2,674   Capital Loss Expert Tacoma, WA
Retired Pierce County Sheriff's Department Sergeant with over 26 years of investigative experience. Qualified to testify as an expert witness on police procedures.   
Expert # 227   Capital Loss Expert Haddonfield, NJ
We can quantify your losses for litigation or insurance purposes.   
Expert # 790   Capital Loss Expert Austin, TX
20 + years as senior official in banking and bank regulation. Expert on bank laws and standard industry practices.   
Expert # 228   Capital Loss Expert Jackson, MS
EW #228 is a certified public accountant, an attorney, and a higher education administrator who supports testimony on economic evaluation, business valuations, bad faith issues and net worth analysis   
Expert # 13,738   Capital Loss Expert Toronto, Ontario
Expertise in business valuation, quantification of damages, accountants negligence, and financial modelling. Insurance experience while working two years for KPMG, Bermuda.   
Expert # 488   Capital Loss Expert Scarsdale, NY
20 years experience in personal injury/wrongful death, antitrust and other commerical litigation including damages for breach of contract and valuation .   
Expert # 267   Capital Loss Expert Los Angeles, CA
  
Expert # 10,756   Capital Loss Expert Parsippany, New Jersey
Pharmacutical industry expert with over 30 years of experience domestically and internationally. Managed the 1st co-promotion arrangement in the industry.   
Expert # 304   Capital Loss Expert Birmingham, MI
Nationally recognized in the fields of insolvency and bankruptcy matters, reorganization, mergers and acquisitions, debt restructuring and economic financial expert testimony.   
Expert # 16,243   Capital Loss Expert Centennial, CO
Marty Mercer is a Certified Public Accountant and an Attorney with over 25 years of experience in business management, financial planning, information technology, and software development. Marty comes from a ‘Big 4’ accounting background and has accumulated a breadth of experience leading and managing the fiscal, operational, and technological functions of companies whose industries include real estate, software development, e-commerce, law, tax, insurance, and public accounting. His experti...   
Expert # 131   Capital Loss Expert Dallas, TX
Expertise extends to the financial valuation of businesses and underlying tangible and intangible assets, in addition to project management and client coordination on large and complex assignments.   
Expert # 7,375   Capital Loss Expert Detroit, MI
35 years of experience in Construction Management of industrial and commercial projects.   
Expert # 602   Capital Loss Expert London, UK
EW #602 work encompasses expert witness and investigation work including large claims, competition cases, high net worth divorce and she also acts as a mediator in commercial disputes.   
Expert # 1,381   Capital Loss Expert Ft Walton Beach, FL
Extensive experience involving electrical designs and failures. Twenty years practice as a technical manager performing the analysis of electrical failures resulting in loss.   
Expert # 3,015   Capital Loss Expert Las Vegas, NV
Experts in construction, accidents, dispute resolution, claims, scheduling, delays, defects, standards of care, estimating, OSHA investigations, and litigation support.   
Expert # 7,535   Capital Loss Expert Thousand Oaks, CA
Hospitality & Timesharing Expert/30+ years experience/highly credible in real estate development, feasibility, business valuation, income loss issues.   
Capital Loss   Capital Loss Expert
Looking for a capital loss expert?   


Find Capital Loss experts and consultants for Capital Loss litigation support at www.findexperts.com. Available to be Capital Loss expert witnesses and provide Capital Loss forensic consulting in Capital Loss litigation, in addition prepare Capital Loss expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.

Categories To Find "Capital Loss" Experts:

ACCOUNTING / BOOKKEEPING / CPAs

Accountancy (profession) or accounting (methodology) is the measurement, disclosure or provision of assurance about information that helps managers and other decision makers make resource allocation decisions. Financial accounting is one branch of accounting and historically has involved processes by which financial information about a business is recorded, classified, summarized, interpreted, and communicated. Auditing, a related but separate discipline, is the process whereby an independent auditor examines an organizations financial statements in order to express an opinion -- that conveys reasonable but not absolute assurance -- as to the fairness and adherence to generally accepted accounting principles, in all material respects.

ANTITRUST

Antitrust or competition laws are laws which seek to promote economic and business competition by prohibiting anti-competitive behavior and unfair business practices. Government agencies known as competition regulators regulate antitrust laws, and may also be responsible for regulating related laws dealing with consumer protection.

ARBITRATION / MEDIATION

Arbitration is a form of mediation or conciliation, where the mediating party is given power by the disputant parties to settle the dispute by making a finding. In practice arbitration is generally used as a substitute for judicial systems, particularly when the judicial processes are viewed as too slow, expensive or biased. Arbitration is also used by communities which lack formal law, as a substitute for formal law. Mediation consists of a process of alternative dispute resolution in which a (generally) neutral third party, the mediator, using appropriate techniques, assists two or more parties to help them negotiate an agreement, with concrete effects, on a matter of common interest. More generally speaking, the term "mediation" covers any activity in which an impartial third party (often a professional) facilitates an agreement on any matter in the common interest of the parties involved.

BANK COMPLIANCE

Compliance requirements are a series of directives established by United States federal government agencies that summarize hundreds of federal laws and regulations applicable to Federal assistance. Bank regulations are a form of government regulation which subject banks to certain requirements, restrictions and guidelines, aiming to uphold the soundness and integrity of the financial system. A bank is an institution that provides financial service, particularly taking deposits and extending credit.

BANKING

A bank is an institution that provides financial service, particularly taking deposits and extending credit.

BANKING REGULATION

Bank regulations are a form of government regulation which subject banks to certain requirements, restrictions and guidelines, aiming to uphold the soundness and integrity of the financial system. A bank is an institution that provides financial service, particularly taking deposits and extending credit.

BANKRUPTCY

Bankruptcy is a legally declared inability or impairment of ability of an individual or organization to pay their creditors. A declared state of bankruptcy can be requested by creditors in an effort to recoup a portion of what they are owed; however, in the overwhelming majority of cases, the bankruptcy is initiated by the bankrupt individual or organization.

CHECK KITING

Check kiting is any sort of fraud that involves drawing out money from a bank account that does not have sufficient funds to cover the check. It is typically achieved by taking advantage of the float, the time between the negotiation of the check and its clearance at the check-writer's bank. This fraud is also known as paper hanging and carries a heavier pejorative connotation. Before the passage of the Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act, when checks could take 3 or more days to clear, playing the float was fairly common practice in otherwise-honest low-income families who encountered emergencies right before payday.

COMPENSATION / WAGES / SALARY

The compensation of every employee is decided by the company owners through the board of directors (in the case of the most highly compensated executive positions) and the management team (or "management committee") (for everyone else). The board of directors may have a personnel and compensation committee that deals specifically with labor compensation.

EARTHQUAKES

An earthquake is a sudden and sometimes catastrophic movement of a part of the Earth's surface. Earthquakes result from the dynamic release of elastic strain energy that radiates seismic waves. Earthquakes typically result from the movement of faults, planar zones of deformation within the Earth's upper crust. The word earthquake is also widely used to indicate the source region itself. The Earth's lithosphere is a patch work of plates in slow but constant motion (see plate tectonics). Earthquakes occur where the stress resulting from the differential motion of these plates exceeds the strength of the crust. The highest stress (and possible weakest zones) are most often found at the boundaries of the tectonic plates and hence these locations are where the majority of earthquakes occur. Events located at plate boundaries are called interplate earthquakes; the less frequent events that occur in the interior of the lithospheric plates are called intraplate earthquakes (see, for example, New Madrid Seismic Zone). Earthquakes related to plate tectonics are called tectonic earthquakes. Most earthquakes are tectonic, but they also occur in volcanic regions and as the result of a number of anthropogenic sources, such as reservoir induced seismicity, mining and the removal or injection of fluids into the crust. Seismic waves including some strong enough to be felt by humans can also be caused by explosions (chemical or nuclear), landslides, and collapse of old mine shafts, though these sources are not strictly earthquakes. These sources will also show a different seismogram than earthquakes

ECONOMIC ANALYSIS

Economic base analysis was developed by Robert Murray Haig in his work on the Regional Plan of New York in 1928. Briefly, activities in an area divide into two categories – basic and non-basic. Basic industries are those exporting from the region; non-basic (or service) industries support basic industries. Because of data problems, it is not practical to study industry output and trade flows to and from a region. As an alternative, basic and non-basic concepts are operationalized using employment data.

ENGINEERING - AUTOMATION

Automation (ancient Greek: = self dictated) or industrial automation or numerical control is the use of control systems such as computers to control industrial machinery and processes, replacing human operators. In the scope of industrialization, it is a step beyond mechanization, where human operators are provided with machinery to assist them with the physical requirements of work.

FOREX - FOREIGN CURRANCY TRADING

The foreign exchange (currency or forex) market exists wherever one currency is traded for another. It is by far the largest market in the world, in terms of cash value traded, and includes trading between large banks, central banks, currency speculators, multinational corporations, governments, and other financial markets and institutions. Retail traders (small speculators) are a small part of this market, and may only participate indirectly through brokers or banks.

INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION

Automation (ancient Greek: = self dictated) or industrial automation or numerical control is the use of control systems such as computers to control industrial machinery and processes, replacing human operators. In the scope of industrialization, it is a step beyond mechanization. Whereas mechanization provided human operators with machinery to assist them with the physical requirements of work, automation greatly reduces the need for human sensory and mental requirements as well.

INSURANCE - GENERAL

General insurance policies, including automobile and homeowners policies, provide payments depending on the loss from a particular financial event. General insurance typically comprises any insurance that is not determined to be life insurance, and is called property and casualty insurance in the U.S..

In the UK, General insurance is broadly divided into three areas; personal lines, commercial lines and London market.

The London market insures with large commercial risks, for example insuring supermarkets, football players and other very specific risks.

Commercial lines products are usually designed for relatively small legal entities. These would include workers comp (employers liability), public liability, product liability, commercial fleet and other general insurance products sold in a relatively standard fashion to many organisations.

Personal lines products are designed to be sold in large quantities. This would include autos (private car), homeowners (household), pet insurance, creditor insurance and others.

INSURANCE - LIFE

Life insurance (Life Assurance in British English) is a type of insurance. As in all insurance, the insured transfers a risk to the insurer, receiving a policy and paying a premium in exchange. The risk assumed by the insurer is the risk of death of the insured.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY - ANALYSIS

In law, intellectual property (IP) is a broad entitlement extending the concept of property beyond its materialist definitions to include information, ideas, and other intangible assets in their expressed form. Depending on jurisdiction, IP rights generally enable the holder to exercise exclusive rights over the the subject matter (or "work") of the IP using copyright, patent, trademark, industrial design right and similar legal protections. The term reinforces that such works are the product of the mind or intellect and that any rights may be protected at law in the same way as any other form of property.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY - LICENSING

In law, intellectual property (IP) is a broad entitlement extending the concept of property beyond its materialist definitions to include information, ideas, and other intangible assets in their expressed form. Depending on jurisdiction, IP rights generally enable the holder to exercise exclusive rights over the the subject matter (or "work") of the IP using copyright, patent, trademark, industrial design right and similar legal protections. The term reinforces that such works are the product of the mind or intellect and that any rights may be protected at law in the same way as any other form of property.

INVESTMENTS

Investment or investing1 is a term with several closely-related meanings in finance and economics, related to saving or deferring consumption. An asset is usually purchased, or equivalently a deposit is made in a bank, in hopes of getting a future return or interest from it. Literally, the word means the "action of putting something in to somewhere else" (perhaps originally related to a person's garment or 'vestment').

MARITAL DISSOLUTION - DIVORCE

Divorce or dissolution of marriage is the ending of a marriage before the death of either spouse, which can be contrasted with an annulment, which is a declaration that a marriage is void, though the effects of marriage may be recognized in such unions, such as spousal support, child custody and distribution of property.

MEDICAL

Medical - Having to do with or anything pertaining to Medical treatment, Medical Malpractice, Medical review, Medical Litigation. Find MEDICAL experts and consultants for MEDICAL litigation support. Available to be MEDICAL expert witnesses and provide MEDICAL forensic consulting in MEDICAL litigation, in addition prepare MEDICAL expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.

MEDICAL LIENS

As all healthcare providers know, patients do not always have the present financial ability to cover the cost of their medical bills. In cases involving injury to a patient through the negligence of another, healthcare professionals can employ medical liens to secure payment for their services. Medical liens can be created in two different ways: 1) by contract and 2) by operation of law. This article will briefly touch on contractual liens while focusing on the express statutory language which create liens through the operation of law.

Find MEDICAL LIENS experts and consultants for MEDICAL LIENS litigation support. Available to be MEDICAL LIENS expert witnesses and provide MEDICAL LIENS forensic consulting in MEDICAL LIENS litigation, in addition prepare MEDICAL LIENS expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.

MERGERS / ACQUISITIONS

The phrase mergers and acquisitions or M&A refers to the aspect of corporate finance strategy and management dealing with the merging and acquiring of different companies as well as other assets. Usually mergers occur in a friendly setting where executives from the respective companies participate in a due diligence process to ensure a successful combination of all parts.

MINING (ORES, PROCESSING)

Mining is the extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials from the earth, usually (but not always) from an ore body, vein, or (coal) seam. Materials recovered by mining include bauxite, coal, diamonds, iron, precious metals, lead, limestone, nickel, phosphate, rock salt, tin,uranium, and molybdenum. Any material that cannot be grown from agricultural processes must be mined. Mining in a wider sense can also include extraction of petroleum, natural gas, and even water.

NEPHROLOGY

Nephrology is the study of the kidney - A nephrologist is a physician who has been educated and trained in kidney diseases, kidney transplantation, and dialysis therapy. Nephrology is classified as an internal medicine subspecialty. Knowledge of internal medicine is required to obtain certification.

POWER PLANTS

A fossil fuel power plant is an energy conversion center that combusts fossil fuels to produce electricity, designed on a large scale for continuous operation.

PUBLISHING

Publishing is the industry concerned with the production of literature or information - the activity of making information available for public view.

REAL ESTATE

Real estate or immovable property is a legal term (in some jurisdictions) that encompasses land along with anything permanently affixed to the land, such as buildings. Real estate (immovable property) is often considered synonymous with real property (also sometimes called realty), in contrast with personal property (also sometimes called chattel or personalty).

REINSURANCE

Reinsurance is a means by which an insurance company (called the reinsured, ceding company or cedant) shares the risk of loss with another insurance company (called the reinsurer).

RISK MANAGEMENT

Risk Management is the process of measuring, or assessing risk and then developing strategies to manage the risk.

TECHNOLOGY

Technology is a word with origins in the Greek "technologia" ("τεχνολογία") — "techne", "τέχνη" ("craft") and "logia", "λογία" ("saying")." "Technology" is a broad term dealing with the use and knowledge of humanity's tools and crafts.

VENTURE CAPITAL

Venture capital is capital provided by outside investors for financing of new, growing or struggling businesses. Venture capital investments generally are high risk investments but offer the potential for above average returns. A venture capitalist (VC) is a person who makes such investments. A venture capital fund is a pooled investment vehicle (often a partnership) that primarily invests the financial capital of third-party investors in enterprises that are too risky for the standard capital markets or bank loans.

WORKERS COMPENSATION

Workers compensation systems (workers comp or compo) provide for financial compensation for work-related injuries of employees, in particular compensation of loss of wages, sometimes also for medical costs. These laws are usually a feature of highly developed industrial societies. Employees compensation laws are often only implemented after long and hard fought struggles by trade unions, particularly in early industrialisation. There are often benefits available to dependents of workers killed on the job as well.