Month-to-Date Period
A Month-to-Date Period is a time period that starts from a first day of a current month to the present day.
- AKA: MTD.
- Context:
- It can be reflected in a Month-to-Date Report.
- See: Year-to-Date, MTD Statistic.
References
2016
- (Wikipedia, 2016) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/month-to-date Retrieved:2016-1-8.
- Month-to-date (MTD) is a period starting at the beginning of the current month and ending at the current date. Month-to-date is used in many contexts, mainly for recording results of an activity in the time between a date (exclusive, since this day may not yet be "complete") and the beginning of the current month.
In the context of finance, MTD is often provided in financial statements detailing the performance of a business entity. Providing current MTD results, as well as MTD results for one or more past months as of the same date, allows owners, managers, investors, and other stakeholders to compare the company's current performance to that of past periods.
MTD describes the return so far this month. For example: the month to date return for the stock is 8%. This means from the beginning of the current month until the current date, stock has appreciated by 8%.
Comparing MTD measures can be misleading if not much of the month has occurred, or the date is not clear. MTD measures are more sensitive to early changes than late changes.
Example:
- Month-to-date (MTD) is a period starting at the beginning of the current month and ending at the current date. Month-to-date is used in many contexts, mainly for recording results of an activity in the time between a date (exclusive, since this day may not yet be "complete") and the beginning of the current month.
MTD factory Orders for January 20th Order January 2----- 80,000 lbs Order January 13---- 40,000 lbs _______ MTD shipments 120,000 lbs