What is an “investment-like transaction?”
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An “investment-like transaction” is a transaction in which a present provision of goods or services is entered into with the expectation of future returns or profits. An investment-like transaction assumes that some or all of the profit will accrue in the future.
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For example, the purchase of a stock is a typical investment-like transaction. When purchasing a stock, the investor uses current wealth (money) to buy the stock and expects that the stock will produce a dividend in the future or that the stock price will rise, thereby earning a profit.
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Similarly, there are investment-like transactions in business.
- When a company purchases equipment to start a new product line, it expects that the equipment will produce new products in the future, which will then be sold for a profit.
- Capital Investment
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It is also a kind of investment transaction in which workers invest their time and effort to work.
- By providing their labor to the firm, workers expect to receive a future benefit in the form of a salary.
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In all of these cases, investment-like transactions are characterized by the pursuit of future profits using some of the resources of the present.
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