Equipment Leasing – 5 Reasons Why Business Owners Prefer Equipment Leasing

Metal Detecting for the Beginner
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You Can Find Gold: With a Metal Detector (Prospecting and Treasure Hunting)
You Can Find Gold: With a Metal Detector (Prospecting and Treasure Hunting)
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Treasures You Can Find
Treasures You Can Find
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Treasure Hunting With Metal Detectors
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Robert Jacobs asked:

Within the past decade, equipment leasing has mushroomed into a multi-billion dollar industry and currently accounts for over one-quarter of all capital expenditures in the United States.

There are five major reasons, or category of reasons why lessees prefer equipment leasing versus a loan for equipment acquisitions.

1) Economic or Financial

2) Financial Reporting

3) Income Taxes

4) Technological

5) Flexibility

Let's examine each of these more closely.

1) Economical. The economic attributes of an equipment lease can be considerable. The monthly rentals in the lease can be quite low when compared to the loan payments levied by a bank, due primarily to the impact of the residual value in a lease.

The tax benefits alone that are generated in the transaction will influence the lease payments as well. The lessor can lower the equipment lease payments when receiving value from tax benefits, although, the lessor may use tax benefits to increase its yield.

Longer lease terms also help to lower the lessee's lease payments. The repayment of the equipment cost is spread out over more periods so less payment needs to be charged each period to recover the entire cost.

Equipment leasing also requires little, if any, up-front cash outlays when compared to a bank loan. Many leases require just one payment up front versus the normal down payment requirement on an installment loan for a lessee with a good credit history. The combination of lower up-front and lower subsequent payments helps to preserve working capital.

Additionally, equipment leasing provides the business owner with another source financing, thus allowing them to diversify their funding options.

2) Financial Reporting. Entities are constantly striving to have their financial statement look as strong and healthy as possible to their shareholders and lenders. When a company purchases equipment and finances it with a loan, an asset, as well as the corresponding liability, appears on the balance sheet. If, however, the company chooses equipment leasing over a loan, and that lease is classified as an operating lease, then no asset or liability would appear on the company balance sheet. Hence, the term operating lease has become synonymous with off-balance-sheet financing.

Off-Balance-Sheet financing is sought after for a variety of reasons: to keep debt off the balance sheet, to improve the financial ratios of a company, and to potentially enhance the company's ability to borrow in the future. It is also conceivable that in the early years of the lease, the operating lease will improve the company's reported earnings when compared to a capital lease or purchase.

3) Income Taxes. The value of tax benefits to the lessor can influence the lease payment charged to the lessee. A built-in reciprocity exists in tax leasing, in that the lessor-owner in a tax lease receives the tax benefits given up by the lessee-user and, in return, may pass those benefits on to the lessee in the form of a lower lease payment. The lessee also receives a tax benefit since the lease payments are fully deductible.

Another income tax factor to consider is the Alternative Minimum Tax or AMT, which is very complex. AMT is a penalty tax imposed by Congress. Equipment leasing, not purchasing, helps an organization avoid falling into this penalty situation, thereby saving taxes.

4) Technological. In today's rapidly changing environment, there is always the risk that high technology equipment will become obsolete. Indeed, the risk of technological obsolescence is one of the primary reasons for leasing. Equipment leasing can help lessees transfer the risk of owning equipment which is no longer technologically useful.

The transfer of risk can be accomplished in several ways. The most obvious would be for a lessee to enter into a short-term agreement, thereby requiring the lessor to assume the technological risk through residual value. If the equipment is still useful at the end of the lease term, the lessee could then renew the lease. If the equipment becomes obsolete during the lease term, the lessor may replace it with newer technology through what is know as a takeout, or an equipment upgrade.

In a takeout, the lessor, through its access to the secondary market, will find a new home for the original equipment because equipment that is obsolete to one entity is not necessarily obsolete to another. For new and untried technology, many lessees prefer leasing the equipment on a short-term or experimental-use basis.

5) Flexibility. A company may simply need the use, not the ownership, of a piece of equipment. Leasing can help a company avoid many of the headaches associated with equipment ownership. For instance, leasing can transfer the burden of disposing of the equipment o the lessor, who typically has better access to the used equipment market. The lessee can also contract with the lessor to take care of the other aspects of ownership, such as insurance, maintenance and property tax, by bundling these costs into the lease payment. Many lessees appreciate this one-stop shopping aspect of equipment leasing.

Many owners/managers prefer equipment leasing, as opposed to purchasing, because leasing enables them to acquire needed equipment out of their operating budgets, without the necessity of going through a lengthy bureaucratic capital budgeting and approval process. Lessees may also benefit from very flexible structuring practices such as step or skipped-payment leases. These type of payment schedules are useful to businesses in industries that are seasonal and disruptive to cashflow.

Note: Business owners should always seek advice from their tax professionals before a major equipment acquisition.

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Metal Detecting for the Beginner Metal Detecting for the Beginner
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Description

"Metal Detecting for the Beginner" is a how-to guide for anyone interested in the sport of metal detecting. Get a feel for a typical hunt; learn key terminology, and how to buy your first detector. This book guides you through the technical concepts you will need to make intelligent choices on the equipment you buy. It includes an ample list of manufacturers, suppliers, and online resources. Welcome to the wonderful world of metal detecting! Expanded 2nd edition now available.

Reviews

A Real Find....

by Paul A. Racioppo from New Jersey on 2009-04-21
If you are looking for a book on Metal Detecting - this is the book. Has web sites, manufacturers, and other useful reference material - was my first book on the subject - and it gave me what I needed - and more... if it was metal vs paperback, it would be one of my talked about finds... worth writing a review about.


Great book for beginners

by Nicky Meinzer from California, USA on 2009-04-14
This is a well written book that gives you all the basics- How detectors work, what you should look for, who the manufacturers are...He even gives good advice, that I wouldn't have thought of on my own- such as searching the internet for antique maps, so you can use the detector in areas that would be more likely to have things of value. Get this book! There is a lot of info, and the book is small enough to get all the information you need in a couple of hours!


You Can Find Gold: With a Metal Detector (Prospecting and Treasure Hunting) You Can Find Gold: With a Metal Detector (Prospecting and Treasure Hunting)
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Reviews

If the old timers had these machines there wouldn't be any

by Jack Purcell from Placitas, NM USA on 2003-09-17
The improvements in technology have corresponded inversely to the number of prospectors. Erosion during the past century has exposed millions of tons of virgin substrata for prospectors of today, and metal detectors will increase the chance of discovering new placers. There's no better expert on metal detector technology than Garrett. Great as those detectors are, they require some training to use them. Garrett provides the best 'how-to' advice available. His book will give you the straight-forward means to practice with it before you begin trekking into the canyons or sweeping old school yards for coins. Learn how to do it and you still mightn't find gold, but you'll certainly find the greatest treasure of them all: solitude.


Gold has a SHINE all it's own. Even Bill Gates Thinks it is GREAT!!!

by drayegon from Redding, CA United States on 2008-10-13
I asked Bill Gates one time Why with all his money he still kept going after even more? He said it is not the Having it is the FINDING that makes his day brighter. I retired from a 9-5 job in 1990. I was 40 years old. I love to find gold. My preferred method is to use a Metal Detector. I have a collection of books written by Charles Garrett. All of them on different ways to use a Metal Detector to find gold or other items of great value. Now you might think that a silver dime is not worth much. Still if it has a great history behind it. I could have been the dime someones father used to call your mother and ask her to marry him. Where would you be if that call never would have been made. This book is into the finding of GOLD like I have said it has a shine like no other. The first thing I found with my latest Infinium LS metal detector was a bracket off of a lawn mower or some such. I would not lie to you for this report. The second item I found with it was how ever a small 1 inch by 1/2 inch by 1/3 inch piece of quartz that had some metals inside of it. I have not ground it up to do an assay on it yet. Still I like to think it has GOLD inside of it. I for one really like listening to Charles Garrett tell us how to find gold or any metal with a detector. I also love it that he is not bad mouthing other metal detectors to try to make his detectors seem better. I do have some of his detectors and I love them. I know one thing listening to him tell about using a metal detector has made me a much better fossicker. Which is how they say it in New Zealand. 73 dray


Treasures You Can Find Treasures You Can Find
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Description

For twenty-nine years the author has searched for lost treasure with a metal detector. His search has led him from the panhandle of Oklahoma to the Wichita Mountains in Southwestern Oklahoma, hunting abandon homesteads, ghost towns, army camps, cache hunting, and Spanish treasures. His stories are told in this book along with true stories of other treasure hunters, many tips, and lots of photos of his finds. Also in this book is a collection of his stories first published in Lost Treasure & Western & Eastern Treasures Magazines of his adventures while metal detecting. If you're interested in all types of treasure hunting, then this book is for you.

Reviews

entertaining and some education

by Dean B from Minnesota on 2010-01-31
This book entertains while also teaching you about places and situations for coin and relic hunting that you might not have otherwise considered. I found the tales of past hunts almost riveting and you probably will too, if you are interested in treasure hunting. Especially interesting information about ghost towns, ball fields, and homesteads in the midwest. Numerous pictures of relics and coins and lots of pictures of tokens. The author has much experience treasure hunting in areas that saw activity many years ago and those places are interesting to read about. The book could have used more editing but for this kind of book I found that just adds to the character of the author and the book.


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