Asset Base

  

The value of your company’s assets, often used to secure a loan.

The calculation of your assets doesn't change if you, say, spend a ton of dough stocking up on inventory. Like if you're a zombie fashion hosiery company and you're stocking up on um...stockings (the thick kind that keep zombie goop inside their bodies) you'll spend a lot of cash to buy that inventory. But the calculation of your assets inherently doesn't change. Rather, the assets go from very liquid (i.e. in the form of cash) to very illiquid in the form of hard-to-sell zombie hosiery.

Lenders care about asset bases because it is what drives their perception of risk in lending you money. If you're Apple or Google with $100 billion just in cash on the books, how well would a lender sleep loaning the company $10 billion in Australia to build out a manufacturing facility if that ten is backed by the hundred in the U.S.? Yeah, probably little sleep lost.

But now instead of GOOG, it's loaning money to Best Buy who may or may not even be around in 10 years. So they'd want to know about that asset base...like if Best Buy actually OWNED instead of leased their stores, there's at least a load of assets behind the loan that the lender could sell to get their money back. Zombie Apocalypses happen all the time so lender sensitivity to asset base size... matters.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Deficit Financing?4 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop what is deficit financing? well its debt, debt used to you

00:09

know buy stuff but the phrase deficit financing gets applied in lots of

00:13

creative ways so here's one courtesy of your friends in Hollywood in [Hollywood sign in the hills appears]

00:18

the glory days of sitcom financings like when cheers and the Brady Bunch and

00:23

Friends were still alive and kicking think you know 1970s 80s and pre 500

00:28

channel 90s sitcoms were funded via deficit financing well a given TV series

00:34

err 22 23 24 25 ish episodes with a flashback or a blooper show thrown in

00:40

for good measure well that might cost a million bucks an

00:43

episode to produce and were kind of rounding the numbers a lot here so

00:46

that's 25 million bucks for a season of yucks the network ABC NBC CBS and Fox [TV network logos appear]

00:52

that's all the network was allowed to air the show twice and for complex legal

00:57

reasons was not allowed to own the show or really participate in its profits if

01:03

there were any yes poor you network that's it so NBC might have paid in

01:08

fifteen million dollars to shmoop Warner mount you know producers of

01:13

friends for the right to broadcast 2 airings of the show over a one-year

01:18

period that's 15 million for a product that costs 25 million so the show's

01:23

producers lost 10 million dollars each year that they were in primary

01:29

production gulp yeah that's a lot of dough but wait Jennifer Aniston has a [Private jet appears on runway]

01:33

really nice jet and gallons of Botox and the hair thing going on there yeah it

01:38

cost big bucks even if most of it really isn't hers well she had to have gotten

01:42

paid a big fat profit participation right well not right away you know like

01:48

she got a salary to be on the show in the first part but you know you get

01:52

money for reruns well in fact friends might have lost say

01:55

four years worth of 10 million bucks a year before the auction floodgates then [Man standing on floodgates]

02:01

opened into the land of reruns where the producers were then paid handsomely for

02:06

their hit show and if you think about the math of a rerun all you have to do is

02:10

hit play on the VCR again and you get paid for that right? so

02:13

really high margin business somebody had to have taken the very big risk of

02:18

deficit financing that 40 million bucks up front though waiting praying hoping

02:23

for that billion dollar win at the end so a given deficit financier might

02:28

contribute 20 million dollars to buy two-thirds of the "back end"

02:33

of the show and we like big back ends we cannot lie meaning the future profits [Profits from ad sales and friends appear]

02:38

that would come from hitting the rerun button on that VCR and selling ads

02:42

against it so how or why could a 20 million dollar investment turn into half

02:47

a billion dollars in a decade or less well because oh so many shows fail and

02:53

if a show goes only two seasons on a network well it has pretty much zero

02:58

after life like nobody watches it in reruns it just dies on the vine

03:02

worthless and all the money that the deficit financier invested well pretty

03:07

much goes up in smoke so yeah deficit financiers are kind

03:10

of like the friends on friends kind of like the venture capitalists of

03:15

Hollywood or at least how Hollywood used to be as long as there's a pile of cash [A big pile of cash on a hill]

03:18

at the end of the rainbow they'll look you know you know it goes

03:21

sing it with me....I'll be there for you yeah I was the original song

03:27

there and then they fired me for some other yutzy band

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