FACTOID # 39: The eight most developed countries all speak Germanic languages.
 
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Encyclopedia > Capital expenditures

Capital expenditures ("CAPEX") are expenditures used by a company to acquire or upgrade physical assets such as equipment, property, industrial buildings. In accounting, a capital expenditure is added to an asset account (i.e. capitalized), thus increasing the asset's basis. Acquire is an abstract board game of investing in hotel chains. ... In computing, an upgrade is the process of replacing an older system with more recent hardware or software in order to bring the system up to date. ... In mathematics, a basis or set of generators is a collection of objects that can be systematically combined to produce a larger collection of objects. ...


See also

A cash flow statement is a financial report that shows incoming and outgoing money during a particular period (often monthly or quarterly). ...

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Capital expenditure - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (163 words)
Capital expenditures ("CAPEX") are expenditures used by a company to acquire or upgrade physical assets such as equipment, property, industrial buildings.
Costs that are expensed in a particular month simply appear on the financial statement as a cost that was incurred that month.
Costs that are capitalized, however, are amortized over multiple years.
Fixed capital - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (432 words)
Fixed capital is a concept in economics and accounting, first theoretically analysed in some depth by the economist David Ricardo.
Fixed capital also "circulates", except that the circulation time is much longer, because a fixed asset may be held for 5, 10 or 20 years before it has yielded its value and is discarded or depreciated.
In national accounts, fixed capital is conventionally defined as the stock of tangible, durable fixed assets owned or used by resident enterprises for more than one year.
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