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Comparing Corporate Funding Obligations
A corporation needs to finance the construction of a new manufacturing plant. It is considering two options: borrowing money from the public through a formal agreement that promises repayment with interest, or selling partial ownership of the company to new investors. From the corporation's perspective, what is the key difference between the long-term obligations created by these two funding methods?
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Corporate Funding Strategy Analysis
A company needs to fund a major expansion project. Match each potential funding method with the description that best characterizes its financial implications for the company.
A well-established, publicly-traded company wants to fund a new, large-scale research and development project. The company's board of directors is adamant about not diluting the ownership stake or voting power of its current shareholders. Given this primary constraint, which of the following funding methods would be the most logical choice for the company to pursue?
A company that raises capital by issuing new shares of stock is creating a legal obligation to repay the amount invested by the new shareholders at a future date.
Comparing Corporate Funding Obligations
Evaluating Funding Options for a High-Growth Company
When a company raises capital by selling ownership stakes to investors, it is issuing ____.
A large, publicly-known corporation plans to build a new factory and needs to raise a significant amount of capital. The management wants to borrow the money directly from a wide pool of individual and institutional investors rather than negotiating with a single financial institution. Which method of funding aligns with this goal?
Startup Funding Dilemma
A manufacturing firm decides to raise capital to upgrade its machinery. It considers two primary options: issuing bonds to the public or issuing new shares of stock. Which statement accurately contrasts the primary obligation the firm creates for itself with each of these two methods?