Asset Base

  

The value of your company’s assets, often used to secure a loan.

The calculation of your assets doesn't change if you, say, spend a ton of dough stocking up on inventory. Like if you're a zombie fashion hosiery company and you're stocking up on um...stockings (the thick kind that keep zombie goop inside their bodies) you'll spend a lot of cash to buy that inventory. But the calculation of your assets inherently doesn't change. Rather, the assets go from very liquid (i.e. in the form of cash) to very illiquid in the form of hard-to-sell zombie hosiery.

Lenders care about asset bases because it is what drives their perception of risk in lending you money. If you're Apple or Google with $100 billion just in cash on the books, how well would a lender sleep loaning the company $10 billion in Australia to build out a manufacturing facility if that ten is backed by the hundred in the U.S.? Yeah, probably little sleep lost.

But now instead of GOOG, it's loaning money to Best Buy who may or may not even be around in 10 years. So they'd want to know about that asset base...like if Best Buy actually OWNED instead of leased their stores, there's at least a load of assets behind the loan that the lender could sell to get their money back. Zombie Apocalypses happen all the time so lender sensitivity to asset base size... matters.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are Assets Under Managemen...8 Views

00:00

Finance a la shmoop what are assets under management?

00:08

[People meditating in a park] yeah that's how it's pronounced.... the yoga mantra AUM mutual funds charge

00:15

fees based on the assets they have under management the larger the asset base the

00:21

bigger the fees they can charge and you know size matters mm-hmm all right well

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most fees are based on a given set of percentages of the total and a lot of [Woman approaches starbucks employee]

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people only want the big mutual funds because well they pay their employees

00:35

the big bucks and presumably big money buys big talent and that's generally [Boy strikes baseball]

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true in baseball right well in a mutual fund family for example there are break

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points in fees that look a lot like the structure of break points in the

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progressive tax system of the United States that is different percentages are

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charged on different levels of you know size for the first billion dollars under

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management a fund might charge 2% like 20 million dollars a year for managing

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that first billion but then from one to five billion the fee might be one and a

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half percent so on that next four billion the fee might be sixty

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million bucks a year then from five billion in assets under management to 15

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billion ie that next 10 billion in size the fee might be one percent or a hundred

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million dollars on that next ten billion of assets for enormous mega funds like [Mutual fund breakpoint table]

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ones with over fifty billion dollars in assets well the fee on that last dollar

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might be just a third of 1% or less and that fee structure creates a wonderfully

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stable revenue base to the fund manager why and like why is this important well [Man discussing mutual funds by a farm]

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you know the stock market volatile so the assets go up and down with the market right well why

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is it valuable because the lion's share of fees are generated from the [Lion walking in a desert]

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"early" part of the fund i.e the low dollar asset amount where the fees

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are a relatively high percentage think about a mega fund with 50 billion

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dollars in AUM well the fee on that last billion might [$50 dollar sack of cash in mega fund]

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be just that 30 basis points or 0.3 percent or just three million dollars

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note that the fee on the first billion dollars of this

02:13

fund was 2% or 20 million bucks a year so if that fund contracts well it's not

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that much of a loss like it could lose that last 10 billion in assets, assets

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under management by going from 50 billion to 40 billion which would be 20%

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of the total of the fund but only lose like 3% of its revenues for the

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privilege of managing all that money why this fee structure?

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well the marginal additional work to manage 50 billion over 40 billion well

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just isn't that much extra work got it that's how assets under management

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generally work at big mutual fund families and that's the lion share of [Mutual fund breakpoint table and lion shadow appears]

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actively managed money at least today in this country so yeah while the fund

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manager sits back and collects those glorious fees while she can be at one [Fund manager performing yoga and woman carrying pile of cash]

03:00

with the universe and keep chanting that AUM, as she collects her fees say it with

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me fee collecting...[Man meditating]

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