We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.


Asset Availability

  

Categories: Investing

You bought an industrial peanut desheller. Paid $10 million for it. But you skrimped on maintenance. So now it's off an eighth of an inch and well, basically, peanut butter is clogging the machine, so you have to take it down for cleaning every other week.

Not only does taking that asset offline cost you time and money, it has made your vendors start to question your reliability in delivering the 10,000 pounds of peanuts you've been selling them for years. So your brand is getting tarnished and bad things are on the horizon for the future of Tortugaville.

If you spend big capital on an asset, the financial story rarely ends there...bad managers don't make accommodation for the needed maintenance, care, love, and feeding that big beast machines always seem to need.

There should be easy math that covers something like, "If I spend $10,000 a month on maintenance, then the machine should be up and working 4 more days a month - are those 4 days worth $2,500 in profitable throughput to the company?" If the answer is "yes" or something even close to "yes" then...yeah, go for it.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is working capital?268 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop. what is working capital? alright people say we're opening

00:08

a lemonade stand. I seed what you did there. unfortunately we can't just blink [man stands in front of stage]

00:13

our eyes like Aladdin's genie and you know make it all happen. magically we

00:17

don't need a ton of money to start things but we need some money in advance. [genie comes out of lamp]

00:21

of you know when we begin collecting revenues well we have to rent a location,

00:27

and pay six months rent in advance, and we got to buy about 87 pounds of

00:32

sugar and 4,000 lemons and hundred fourteen huge bottles of purified water,

00:36

oh and cups we need eight thousand cups. all told it costs about 50 grand in

00:42

capital, working capital. see we did there, we need before we can start to run the

00:48

business, and you know pay employees and so on .so we get an investor TBOG. the [people stand in line for lemonade]

00:54

bank of Grandma. yeah we love her. she gives us a hundred grand. well that

00:58

entire hundred grand invested into our little business is our total working

01:03

capital. right? fifty grand and start the business working and we got 50 left over

01:07

or just in case things don't start up as quick as we hope .its capital that lets

01:12

us start working. in cleverly named there. all right well 50 grand we know we're

01:16

gonna spend 50 grand and cover the time in between when we're up and running and [calendar]

01:20

revenues and all the other stuff start to kick in. and well yeah it's that

01:23

simple. put together an actual drinkable lemonade recipe ?well that's just a

01:27

little bit harder. working capital. live it love it breathe it. [ grandma grimaces]

Up Next

Finance: What is Liquidity?
64 Views

What is liquidity? Think: water. It's liquid. It can be squeezed into little, tiny spaces and infused into large spaces. A defining trait of liquid...

Finance: What is a Liquid Market?
17 Views

A liquid market is a market featuring high trading volumes, i.e. investors actually want to put their cash to work.

Finance: What is Capital Expenditure, i.e. Capex?
56 Views

What is capital expenditure (CAPEX)? Capital expenditure refers to the money that is used to buy or fix the physical parts of a business like land,...

Finance: What is Brand Equity?
3 Views

What is Brand Equity? Brand Equity refers to the added or subtracted value that name recognition may accord to a company’s products and services....

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