investing activity
(noun)
An activity that causes changes in non-current assets or involves a return on investment.
Examples of investing activity in the following topics:
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Cash Flow from Investing
- Cash flow from investing results from activities related to the purchase or sale of assets or investments made by the company.
- These activities are represented in the investing income part of the income statement.
- However, this cash flow is not representative of an investing activity on the part of the company.
- The investing activity was undertaken by the shareholder.
- Some examples of investment activity from the company's perspective would include:
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Reporting Investing Activities
- These activities are represented in the investing income part of the income statement.
- It is important to note that investing activity does not concern cash from outside investors, such as bondholders or shareholders.
- However, this cash flow is not representative of an investing activity on the part of the company.
- The investing activity was undertaken by the shareholder; therefore, paying out a dividend is a financing activity.
- When reporting investing activities, it is important to be able to decipher a cash inflow from a cash outflow.
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Components of the Statement of Cash Flows
- The cash flow statement has 3 parts: operating, investing, and financing activities.
- Investing activities are purchases or sales of assets (land, building, equipment, marketable securities, etc.), loans made to suppliers or received from customers, and payments related to mergers and acquisitions.
- Non-cash investing and financing activities are disclosed in footnotes to the financial statements.
- Statement of cash flows includes cash flows from operating, financing and investing activities.
- Recognize how operating, investing and financing activities influence the statement of cash flows
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Payments
- Cash payments describe cash flowing out of a business resulting from operating activities, investment activities and financing activities.
- These cash payments can result from operating activities, investment activities and financing activities.
- Generally speaking, normal operating activities refer to the cash effects of transactions involving revenues and expenses that impact net income.
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Cash Flow from Financing
- Cash flows from financing activities arise from the borrowing, repaying, or raising of money.
- Everything concerning the loan is a financing activity.
- Extending credit is an investing activity, so all cash flows related to that loan fall under cash flows from investing activities, not financing activities.
- As is the case with operating and investing activities, not all financing activities impact the cash flow statement -- only those that involve the exchange of cash do.
- Distinguish financing activities that affect a company's cash flow statement from all of the business's other transactions
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Reporting Financing Activities
- Reporting financing activities involves determining if cash is received or paid out due to financing activities such as issuing stock or paying dividends.
- Other activities which impact the long-term liabilities and equity of the company are also listed in the financing activities section of the cash flow statement.
- Everything concerning the loan is a financing activity.
- Extending credit is an investing activity, so all cash flows related to that loan fall under cash flows from investing activities, not financing activities.
- Non-cash financing activities may include:
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Market Actors
- Issuers may be domestic or foreign governments, corporations, or investment trusts.
- There are three types of U.S. mutual funds: open-end, unit investment trust, and closed-end.
- Exchange-traded funds are open-end funds or unit investment trusts that trade on an exchange.
- An exchange-traded fund (ETF) is an investment fund traded on stock exchanges, much like stocks.
- A hedge fund is an fund that can undertake a wider range of investment and trading activities than other funds.
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Overview of Investment Banking Functions in M&A
- Many companies looking to expand, or streamline, their business will use investment banks for advice on potential targets and/or buyers.
- With increasing competitive pressures being placed on businesses and the trend towards globalization, companies are engaging more and more in M&A activity.
- Many companies looking to expand or streamline their business will use investment banks for advice on potential targets and/or buyers.
- An investment bank that represents a potential seller has a much greater likelihood of completing a transaction (and therefore being paid) than an investment bank that represents a potential acquirer.
- In fact, one of the main roles investment banks play is to introduce new securities to market.
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Defining the Cost of Capital
- The cost of capital is the rate of return that could be earned on an investment with similar risk.
- If a project is of similar risk to a company's average business activities, it is reasonable to use the company's average cost of capital as a basis for project evaluation.
- Since IRR measures the efficiency of investments, as opposed to magnitude, IRRs are commonly used to evaluate the desirability of investments or projects.
- If the IRR of an investment exceeds its cost of capital, the project should be undertaken.
- A graph showing the decision between two exclusive investments based on IRR.
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Assets
- Cash equivalents are distinguished from other investments through their short-term existence; they mature within 3 months whereas short-term investments are 12 months or less, and long-term investments are any investments that mature in excess of 12 months.
- Non-current assets include property, plant and equipment (PPE), investment property (such as real estate held for investment purposes), intangible assets, long-term financial assets, investments accounted for by using the equity method, and biological assets, which are living plants or animals.
- There are two primary forms of intangibles - legal intangibles (such as trade secrets (e. g., customer lists), copyrights, patents, and trademarks) and competitive intangibles (such as knowledge activities (know-how, knowledge), collaboration activities, leverage activities, and structural activities).
- Investments accounted for by using the equity method are 20-50% stake investments in other companies.
- The investor's proportional share of the associate company's net income increases the investment (and a net loss decreases the investment), and proportional payment of dividends decreases it.