GURUFOCUS.COM » STOCK LIST » Technology » Hardware » Datalink Corp (NAS:DTLK) » Definitions » Gross Property, Plant and Equipment

Datalink (Datalink) Gross Property, Plant and Equipment : $8.3 Mil (As of Sep. 2016)


View and export this data going back to 1999. Start your Free Trial

What is Datalink Gross Property, Plant and Equipment?

Datalink's quarterly gross PPE increased from Mar. 2016 ($8.3 Mil) to Jun. 2016 ($8.8 Mil) but then declined from Jun. 2016 ($8.8 Mil) to Sep. 2016 ($8.3 Mil).

Datalink's annual gross PPE increased from Dec. 2013 ($18.3 Mil) to Dec. 2014 ($21.3 Mil) but then declined from Dec. 2014 ($21.3 Mil) to Dec. 2015 ($16.7 Mil).


Datalink Gross Property, Plant and Equipment Historical Data

The historical data trend for Datalink's Gross Property, Plant and Equipment 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.

* Premium members only.

Datalink Gross Property, Plant and Equipment Chart

Datalink Annual Data
Trend Dec06 Dec07 Dec08 Dec09 Dec10 Dec11 Dec12 Dec13 Dec14 Dec15
Gross Property, Plant and Equipment
Get a 7-Day Free Trial Premium Member Only Premium Member Only 12.43 15.60 18.34 21.29 16.70

Datalink Quarterly Data
Dec11 Mar12 Jun12 Sep12 Dec12 Mar13 Jun13 Sep13 Dec13 Mar14 Jun14 Sep14 Dec14 Mar15 Jun15 Sep15 Dec15 Mar16 Jun16 Sep16
Gross Property, Plant and Equipment Get a 7-Day Free Trial Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only 7.85 16.70 8.32 8.78 8.34

Datalink Gross Property, Plant and Equipment Calculation

Property, Plant and Equipment (PPE) are the fixed assets of the company. Fixed assets are also known as non-current assets.

Property, plant, and equipment includes assets that will - in the normal course of business - neither be used up in the next year nor will become a part of any product sold to customers.

Some of the most common parts of property, plant, and equipment are:


Land
Buildings (and leasehold improvements)
Transportation equipment
Manufacturing equipment
Office equipment
Office furniture

Companies with lots of property, plant, and equipment often have special categories. For example, railroad property includes:


Track
Ties
Ballast
Bridges
Tunnels
Signals
Locomotives
Freight Cars

There is often a note in the financial statements - found in a company's 10-K - that will explain the different categories of property a company owns.

The market value of property, plant, and equipment can differ tremendously from the book value of property, plant, and equipment.

For example, when Berkshire Hathaway liquidated its textile mills, it had to pay the buyers of the company's manufacturing equipment to haul the equipment away. That property, plant, and equipment was literally worth less than zero. On the other hand, some companies own thousands of acres of land.

All property, plant, and equipment other than land is depreciated. Land is never depreciated. However, land is not marked up to market value either. Under Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), land is shown on the balance sheet at cost.

The property, plant, and equipment line shown on the balance sheet is usually net property, plant, and equipment. This means it is the cost of the property, plant, and equipment less accumulated depreciation.


Datalink  (NAS:DTLK) Gross Property, Plant and Equipment Explanation

A company with durable competitive advantage doesn't need to constantly upgrade its equipment to stay competitive. The company replaces when it wears out. On the other hand, a company without any advantages must replace to keep pace.

Difference between a company with a moat and one without is that the company with the competitive advantage finances new equipment through internal cash flows, whereas the no advantage company requires debt to finance.

Producing a consistent product that doesn't change equates to consistent profits. There is no need to upgrade plants which frees up cash for other ventures. Think Coca Cola, Johnson & Johnson etc.


Datalink Gross Property, Plant and Equipment Related Terms

Thank you for viewing the detailed overview of Datalink's Gross Property, Plant and Equipment provided by GuruFocus.com. Please click on the following links to see related term pages.


Datalink (Datalink) Business Description

Industry
GURUFOCUS.COM » STOCK LIST » Technology » Hardware » Datalink Corp (NAS:DTLK) » Definitions » Gross Property, Plant and Equipment
Traded in Other Exchanges
N/A
Address
Datalink Corp was incorporated in the State of Minnesota in 1987. It provides solutions and services that make data centers efficient, manageable and responsive to changing business needs. The Company assesses designs, deploys, manages, and offers support unified infrastructures such as servers, storage and networks. It offers full suite of practice-specific consulting, analysis, design, implementation, management, and support services. The Company has a physical laboratory that customers can visit in Minneapolis enabling them to participate in physical demonstrations of a variety of technologies, including: site-to-site replication, data recovery, WAN optimization, de-duplication, and virtual data center architectures. It leverages this lab to test, validate and compare technologies from manufacturers and software developers, perform configuration services, troubleshoot support issues and train its professional and support services teams. It provides around the clock technical support from a team of customer support and field engineers. The Company provides analysis, design, implementation, management and support services to customers through either a stand-alone services engagement or as a part of an overall project that includes a server, storage and networking solutions and services. Its portfolio of solutions and services spans four practices: Consolidation and virtualization; Data storage and protection; and Business continuity and disaster recovery solutions. The Company does not manufacture products, but works with end users to assess their information-storage and retrieval requirements and then designs the solutions. Its customers include computer technology, financial service, insurance, telecommunications, consumer product, Internet, and transportation companies across the United States.
Executives
James E Ousley director BELL MICRO, 1941 RINGWOOD AVE., SAN JOSE CA 95131
Brent G Blackey director 8170 UPLAND CIRCLE, CHANHASSEN MN 55317
Paul F Lidsky director, officer: President & CEO 10340 VIKING DRIVE, SUITE 150, EDEN PRAIRIE MN 55344
Mercedes Walton director
Gregory T Barnum officer: CFO
Robert M Price director 5225 GRANDVIEW SQUARE, APT 204, EDINA MN 55436
Margaret A Loftus director 2305 CIRCULA DEANZA, TUBAC AZ 85646
James D Leslie officer: EVP, Strategy & Business Devel 10050 CROSSTOWN CIRCLE, SUITE 500, EDEN PRAIRIE MN 55344
Karen E. Clary officer: Exec VP Human Resources 8170 UPLAND CIRCLE CHANHASSEN MN 55317

Datalink (Datalink) Headlines

From GuruFocus

Datalink Corp. Reports Operating Results (10-Q)

By gurufocus 10qk 11-12-2009

Datalink Corp. Reports Operating Results (10-Q)

By gurufocus 10qk 05-17-2010

Datalink: A Pendulum-Like Swing Offers 100% Upside Potential

By apolloportfolio apolloportfolio 05-22-2014

Datalink Corp. Reports Operating Results (10-Q)

By gurufocus 10qk 08-13-2010

Datalink Corp. Reports Operating Results (10-K)

By gurufocus 10qk 03-01-2011