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Atlas African Industries (LSE:AAI) Cash Flow from Investing : £-0.13 Mil (TTM As of Jun. 2016)


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What is Atlas African Industries Cash Flow from Investing?

Cash Flow from Investing covers the cash a company gains or spends from investment activities in financial market and operating subsidiaries. It also includes the cash the company used for property, plant and equipment (PPE).

For the six months ended in Jun. 2016, Atlas African Industries spent £0.16 Mil on purchasing property, plant, equipment. It gained £0.03 Mil from selling property, plant, and equipment. It spent £0.00 Mil on purchasing business. It gained £0.00 Mil from selling business. It spent £0.00 Mil on purchasing investments. It gained £0.00 Mil from selling investments. It paid £0.00Mil for net Intangibles purchase and sale. And it received £0.00 Mil from other investing activities. In all, Atlas African Industries spent £0.13 Mil on investment activities in financial market and operating subsidiaries for the six months ended in Jun. 2016.


Atlas African Industries Cash Flow from Investing Historical Data

The historical data trend for Atlas African Industries's Cash Flow from Investing can be seen below:

* For Operating Data section: All numbers are indicated by the unit behind each term and all currency related amount are in USD.
* For other sections: All numbers are in millions except for per share data, ratio, and percentage. All currency related amount are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.

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Atlas African Industries Cash Flow from Investing Chart

Atlas African Industries Annual Data
Trend Dec11 Dec12 Jun13 Jun14
Cash Flow from Investing
-0.24 -1.05 - -5.16

Atlas African Industries Semi-Annual Data
Dec11 Dec12 Dec13 Jun14 Dec14 Jun16
Cash Flow from Investing Get a 7-Day Free Trial - - -1.35 -3.11 -0.13

Atlas African Industries Cash Flow from Investing Calculation

Cash Flow from Investing covers the cash a company gains or spends from investment activities in financial market and operating subsidiaries. It also includes the cash the company used for property, plant and equipment (PPE).

If a company spends cash on property, plant and equipment (PPE), this will reduce their cash position. This is called Capital Expenditures (CPEX).

Likewise, if a company buys another company for cash, this will reduce their cash position.

Atlas African Industries's Cash Flow from Investing for the fiscal year that ended in Jun. 2014 is calculated as:

Atlas African Industries's Cash Flow from Investing for the quarter that ended in Jun. 2016 is calculated as:


Cash Flow from Investing for the trailing twelve months (TTM) ended in Jun. 2016 adds up the semi-annually data reported by the company within the most recent 12 months, which was £-0.13 Mil.

* For Operating Data section: All numbers are indicated by the unit behind each term and all currency related amount are in USD.
* For other sections: All numbers are in millions except for per share data, ratio, and percentage. All currency related amount are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.


Atlas African Industries  (LSE:AAI) Cash Flow from Investing Explanation

Cash flow from investing contains nine items:

1. Purchase Of Property, Plant, Equipment:
Purchase of PPE indicates the amount used to purchase property, plant, and equipment.

Atlas African Industries's purchase of property, plant, equipment for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £-0.16 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries spent £0.16 Mil on purchasing property, plant, equipment.

In the capital spending for property, plant and equipment (PPE), some part of spending may be from the expansion of business. The business needs more property, plant and equipment (PPE) as it grows. Another part may be from replacement of the property, plant and equipment (PPE) of existing business. For some companies, the cash spent on replacing of the property, plant and equipment (PPE) of the existing business will be close to the depreciation of property, plant and equipment (PPE) reported in the income statement.

In Warren Buffett's definition of Owner's Earnings, he deducts the estimate of the cost of replacing the property, plant and equipment (PPE) of the existing business from cash flow from operations. The cash spent on the new property, plant, and equipment is not deducted. The reason is because these are not costs of the existing business. In his 1986 letter to shareholders, Warren Buffett wrote this about owner earnings:

"These represent (a) reported earnings plus (b) depreciation, depletion, amortization, and certain other non-cash charges...less (c) the average annual amount of capitalized expenditures for plant and equipment, etc. that the business requires to fully maintain its long-term competitive position and its unit volume....Our owner-earnings equation does not yield the deceptively precise figures provided by GAAP, since (c) must be a guess - and one sometimes very difficult to make. Despite this problem, we consider the owner earnings figure, not the GAAP figure, to be the relevant item for valuation purposes...All of this points up the absurdity of the 'cash flow' numbers that are often set forth in Wall Street reports. These numbers routinely include (a) plus (b) - but do not subtract (c)."

2. Sale Of Property, Plant, Equipment:
Sale of PPE indicates the amount gained from selling property, plant, and equipment.

Atlas African Industries's sale of property, plant, equipment for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £0.03 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries gained £0.03 Mil from selling property, plant, and equipment.

3.Purchase Of Business:
Purchase of business indicates the amount used to purchase business.

Atlas African Industries's purchase of business for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £0.00 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries spent £0.00 Mil on purchasing business.

4. Sale Of Business:
Sale of business indicates the amount gained from selling business.

Atlas African Industries's sale of business for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £0.00 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries gained £0.00 Mil from selling business.

5. Purchase Of Investment:
Purchase of Investments represents cash outflow on the purchase of investments in securities.

Atlas African Industries's purchase of investment for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £0.00 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries spent {stock_data.stock.currency_symbol}}0.00 Mil on purchasing investments.

6. Sale Of Investment:
Sale of Investments represents cash inflow on the sale of investments in securities.

Atlas African Industries's sale of investment for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £0.00 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries gained £0.00 Mil from selling investments.

7. Net Intangibles Purchase And Sale:
Net Intangibles purchase and sale means the net cash inflow received by a company that comes from the purchase and sale of intangibles. It equals the cash received from sale of intangibles minus the cash spent on purchasing intangibles.

Atlas African Industries's net Intangibles purchase and sale for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £0.00 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries paid £0.00 Mil for net Intangibles purchase and sale.

8. Cash From Discontinued Investing Activities:
Cash from discontinued investing activities means the cash received by a company that comes from the discontinued investing activities.

Atlas African Industries's cash from discontinued investing activities for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was 0.00 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries paid £0.00 Mil for discontinued investing activities.

9. Cash From Other Investing Activities:
Cash from other investing activities means the cash received by a company that comes from other investing activities.

Atlas African Industries's cash from other investing activities for the six months ended in Jun. 2016 was £0.00 Mil. It means Atlas African Industries received £0.00 Mil from other investing activities.


Atlas African Industries Cash Flow from Investing Related Terms

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Atlas African Industries (LSE:AAI) Business Description

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Atlas African Industries Ltd, formerly known as Atlas Development & Support Services Ltd, was incorporated in Guernsey under the Law on December 5, 2012. The Company has a Joint Venture agreement with Ethiopian conglomerate Orchid Group to provide services in civil engineering and project management offering into industrial projects. The Company's operates in industrial division and support services division. Its 100% owned subsidiary, East Africa Packaging Holdings, is focused glass bottle manufacturing facility 45km north of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia known as the Chancho Project. The Chancho Project is in feasibility stage with a defined development strategy to construct and operate a glass bottle manufacturing facility. The JV provides services to clients in the natural resource development and infrastructure sectors, through civil engineering, project management, work-force accommodation solutions and on-going life support services.

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