Borrowed Capital
  
“Neither a borrower nor a lender be,” Shakespeare tells us in Hamlet. But if you are starting a new business or buying a house, chances are you will need to borrow some capital. To be in debt or not to be in debt, that is the question.
Borrowed capital is when you go hat in hand to a bank or other lender, fill out all kinds of paperwork, and hopefully obtain a loan based on your income or other assets. The value of your home serves as collateral (what they will take if you don’t pay back the loan) and for businesses, the collateral might be the value of your accounts receivable or finished inventory.
Borrowed capital is different from “equity capital,” where you are making a down payment on a house from your own savings or selling all your jewelry in order to start your new business. Another way companies borrow capital is to issue bonds that have to be paid back with interest.
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Finance: What is Capital Expenditure, i....56 Views
finance- a la shmoop. what is capex ?funny name kind of sounds like group therapy
for men trying to quit wearing hats or maybe it's a Space Age head cover [men sit in a circle]
Michael Phelps will wear on his comeback tour. sadly it's neither of those. capex
is short for capital expenditure and it simply refers to the spending of capital
to buy stuff. you know what an expenditure is ie an expense, for example
when famed surgical glove manufacturer all you need is glove spends money on [man smiles in front of warehouse]
synthetic rubber for its products, well, the buying of the gallons and gallons of
rubber is an expense. they generally use that rubber within a short timeframe of
when they bought it- a month a quarter certainly within the year. so the buckets
of rubber they buy for their raw material are just a normal expenditure
or expense. so what makes something a capital expense? well think about it like
a petty crime versus a capital crime. in a petty crime the criminal will do time
and be done and move on in life. a capital crime means someone was killed [man walks out of jail]
whole different level of serious -versus that jaywalking thing -so when a capital
expenditure comes around well its costs are taken or allocated or amortized over
long periods of time like years or even decades. you know like a prison sentence.
so when all you need is glove buys a new robotic rubber gloves machine so that [assembly line shown]
they no longer have to sew the gloves by hand, that is a capital expense. why
because it costs a lot of money 10 million bucks in fact ,and because they
expect to be able to use that thing for 20 years before it wears out and is
worthless. so they'll spend 10 million dollars in
cash today of their capital to buy it and then reduce that value by 500 grand
a year on their balance sheet each year for 20 years. the value of their capital [balance sheet shown]
expenditure will slowly decline to nothing on their books but it will
presumably more than pay for itself in saved costs applied to human labor in
making the gloves. as for actually using the [robot holds up hand]
however well it'll be a while until we can trust robots with that.
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