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by rhino369 1907 days ago
You only get to deduct expenses, not investments. They could have bought a 70 million dollar piece of farm equipment with that money to reinvest, but they'd only get to deduct a small portion that year.

Regardless, you can't tell based on the data given whether the companies re-invested the money or distributed to shareholders. The difference between those companies could just be whether they booked a $50M sale on Dec. 31 or Jan. 1. Or whether they wrote off a bad asset on Dec. 31 or Jan. 1.

It's totally capricious.

1 comments

I guess there's something I don't understand here. You're telling me that if a company spends money to invest in itself or improve its infrastructure, that isn't considered an expense? That seems like it would disincentivize investment in company growth.
Capital expenditure (infrastructure) and operating expenses are treated differently.

An investment in a new factory cannot be deducted as a business expense all at once; it must be depreciated over its useful life, so only a portion of it can be recorded as an operating expense against income for every year it is used.

For software companies it's fuzzy; if you have a team of developers constantly working on enhancements to the company's platform, should the staff wages be counted as expenses or capital investment? It comes down to accountancy technicalities:

https://www.wallstreetprep.com/knowledge/accounting-capitali...