Long-Term Assets

  

Categories: Accounting

See: Long-Term Liabilities. Same idea, only a long-term asset is something a company will hold for over a year.

Think: a patent. Or a new smelting factory. Or the acquisition of an overseas competitor. All long-term assets, with little to no grief from short-term thinkers. They are long-term asses.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Float?12 Views

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Finance a la shmoop what is float? well this floats and this sinks to the bottom [Shark eats another fish]

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and well just doesn't move well float in a financial sense is kind of the same

00:14

thing sorta..... whatever dot-com goes public and sells 30% of itself to the public it

00:22

had 50 million shares before the IPO and then it sold 15 million shares so that

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now there are 65 million outstanding right it just ran the Xerox machine [Shares printing from xerox machine]

00:31

printed 15 million shares and sold them well at this moment the shares trading

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or the float are just 15 million that's the float that 15 million numbers the

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shares trading well then gradually after six months or so insiders begin selling

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their shares so that you know they can buy Porsches and diamond-studded tennis [Diamond studded tennis racket appears]

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rackets and pay divorce settlements and all that stuff so twelve million from

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that 50 million pool now go from being sunk or not moving at all to floating or

01:03

being in the normal trading pool which will have grown from yes 15 million to

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now 27 million that 27 million shares is the float so why does float matter well

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it's a direct reflection of the liquidity of the company well let's say

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that on average a given company trades two percent of its shares you know the

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ones that are floating so here two percent of 27 million is just a little

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over half a million shares a day or 540 thousand shares a day that's actually a

01:32

really small amount let's say the stock was trading for 20 bucks it's only 10 [Magnifying glass inspects cash]

01:37

million dollars a day in total trade volume for a company that has a much

01:40

larger market cap that's tiny teeny teeny tiny so for larger mutual funds

01:45

which are tens of billions of dollars in size a tiny float makes it really hard

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for them to get into the stock and more importantly get out of the stock when [People frantically moving in a stock market house]

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they want to so those big funds generally just avoid stocks with tiny

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floats and the cost to the company is that well there's less demanders or

02:04

buyers for it so its stock tends to trade at lower multiples and it's also a

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problem in that the shareholders of the very large mutual funds have the [Businessmen shaking hands]

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ear of very large companies who often are you know acquisitive so that the

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tiny companies with small floats aren't whispered about by the fund managers to

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the companies who might be thinking about buying whatever.com or you know

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whatever so yeah that's the float and if you're a big pond you, you know want to

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avoid the small fish [Small fish float to the top of a pond]

Up Next

Finance: What are Fixed Assets, Tangible Assets and Intangible Assets?
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What are Fixed Assets, Tangible Assets and Intangible Assets? Fixed assets are long term, illiquid assets that are necessary for a company’s oper...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)