Investing and financing
New investments are signs of growing or upgrading the production and distribution facilities and capacity of the business. A value investor looks at what value investing is and isn't. He contrasts value investing with other forms of investing such as growth investing and contrarian investing. Disposing of long-term assets or divesting itself of a major part of its business can be good or bad news, depending on what's driving those activities. A business generally disposes of some of its fixed assets every year because they reached the end of their useful lives and will not be used any longer. These fixed assets are disposed of or sold or traded on new fixed assets. The value of a fixed asset at the end of its useful life is called its salvage value. The proceeds from selling fixed assets are reported as a source of cash in the investing activities section of the statement of cash flows. Usually these are very small amounts.
Like individuals, companies at times have to finance its acquisitions when its internal cash flow isn't enough to finance business growth. If there were only two reasons for a business to fail they would be poor financing and poor management or planning. Financing refers to a business raising capital from debt and equity sources, by borrowing money from banks and other sources willing to loan money to the business and by its owners putting additional money in the business. The term also includes the other side, making payments on debt and returning capital to the owners, it includes cash distributions by the business from profit to its owners.