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Basic Question 4 of 12
Capitalizing an expenditure rather than expensing it results in ______.
II. lower profitability ratios in the early years
III. greater shareholders' equity in the early years
I. greater amounts reported as cash from operations
II. lower profitability ratios in the early years
III. greater shareholders' equity in the early years
User Contributed Comments 5
User | Comment |
---|---|
cong | I: cash expenditure for capitalization results in a reduction in cash OUTFLOW from operations, thus an increase in CFO. III: Less is expensed in early years for capitalization. |
weehongw | the cash flow is categotized as CFI if capitalized thus results in a higher CFO |
Paulvw | Capitalizing a single expense only results in higher profitability ratios in the first year, lower thereafter (Reading 22, pp 60-61). Multiple capitalizations can produce false profitability numbers for a number of years. |
quanttrader | capitalizing is CFI and thus CFO is higher vs expensing exppensig is CFO and thus CFI is higher vs capitalizing |
VazquezCol | Answer I is more complicated than it seems. As said in previous answers, the first year the cash outflow when capitalizing is of Investing type but it will be operating if the asset gets expensed. That is clear. But what after the first year? Then, if the asset was expensed, there is no depreciation and therefore the company will pay more taxes because Earnings Before Taxes will be higher than if it was capitalized. So expensing will have higher operating cash outflows than capitalizing also in the long run. That is why the answer I doesn't mention long or short term at all. |
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Learning Outcome Statements
describe general principles of expense recognition, specific expense recognition applications, implications of expense recognition choices for financial analysis and contrast costs that are capitalized versus those that are expensed in the period in which they are incurred
CFA® 2025 Level I Curriculum, Volume 2, Module 2.