Capital Expenditures

RECENT NEWS
Mining Weekly  2 hrs ago  Comment 
The capital expenditure (capex) required for junior New Horizon Coal to bring its Kinney project, in the US, to production, has decreased by some $40-million. The ASX-listed New Horizon said on Wednesday that a comprehensive review of the capex...
The Economic Times  Jun 17  Comment 
Kotak Institutional Equities upgraded the stock to ‘ADD’ from ‘Reduce’ earlier and also also raised its 12-month target price to Rs 870 from Rs 855.
The Hindu Business Line  Jun 10  Comment 
Targets total debt reduction of Rs 500 cr
Finance Asia  Jun 10  Comment 
Investors and economists in Tokyo wonder how to get Japanese corporations to start investing a ¥200 trillion cash horde.     
Finance Asia  Jun 9  Comment 
Investors and economists in Tokyo wonder how to get Japanese corporations to start investing a ¥200 trillion cash horde.     
Reuters  Jun 9  Comment 
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Sunday the government would decide on tax cuts in autumn to encourage companies to boost capital expenditure as part of sweeping reforms to revive the economy from nearly two decades of stagnation.
The Economic Times  Jun 6  Comment 
The key drivers behind the growth would be infrastructure and hydrocarbon segments, CLSA said.
Financial Times  Jun 2  Comment 
Telecom will reveal the budgeted hike in domestic capital expenditure this week, saying that spending will increase by more than £300m, up from £600m last year
FX Street  May 30  Comment 
Today's Highlights AUD stronger on Capex news US economic growth data due OECD expresses views on... For more information, read our latest forex news and reports.
FX Street  May 30  Comment 
Market Brief The risk appetite is severely limited ahead of the very much expected US data this... For more information, read our latest forex news and reports.




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A Capital Expenditure is money a company spends to acquire or upgrade a business asset.

Common examples of a capital expenditure include the purchase of a new building, or the cost of significant upgrades to the equipment in an existing facility. In accounting, a capital expenditure is "capitalized", which means the cost or value of the underlying asset is adjusted for tax purposes and will now include the capital spent to upgrade it. A capital expenditure is considered to be deductible for tax purposes, because it represents an improvement to the business. But it cannot be deducted all at once, in the year in which the money was spent, if the property acquired or upgraded has a useful life longer than the taxable year. In this situation the capital expenditure is subject to Depreciation and Amortization and is deducted over the expected life of the item, rather than all at once, which is what happens with repair or maintenance expenditures.

Thus there is an important distinction between expenses that are "capitalized" by a company and those that are "expensed." A cost for repair or maintenance will appear on a company's Financial statement one time, as a cost incurred that month. But a capital expenditure will be amortized over multiple years, as the value of the underlying asset declines over time, on a company's balance sheet.

Capital expenditure is synonymous with 'capital spending' or 'capital expense' and is also know as CAPEX. The counterpoint of capital expenditures is Operating Expense or OPEX. This is the on-going cost for running a product, business, or system, as opposed to CAPEX which is the cost of developing or providing the parts necessary to make the product or system. For example, the purchase of a laptop computer is a capital expenditure, but the cost of the broadband internet subscription that a worker needs in using the computer is an operating expense.

Applications of CAPEX

Capex is commonly found on the Cash Flow Statement as "Investment in Plant Property and Equipment" or something similar in the Investing subsection. Publicly traded companies will often list their capital expenditures for the year in annual reports, which allows stockholders to see how the company is using their money and whether it is investing in its long-term future. Most companies have yearly capital expenditures as they consistently upgrade facilities and equipment.

Examples of CAPEX vs OPEX

  1. A company buys a copy machine (CAPEX); and buys toner and paper to operate it (OPEX).
  2. Installing a new bathroom in company offices (CAPEX); fixing the broken toilet so workers can use it (OPEX).
  3. Large media agency acquires a smaller media company in a cash-and-stock deal (CAPEX); pays the cost to move existing employees into the consolidated company's new offices (OPEX).
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