Core Assets

Core Assets

Core assets include all assets including essential, important, or valuable property without which a company cannot carry on with its normal operations and remain profitable. Examples of core assets may include tangible assets such as machinery, production facilities, and intangible assets such as intellectual property. Companies that have trouble financially tend to initially raise money by selling off non-core assets instead of core assets. Core assets include all assets including essential, important, or valuable property without which a company cannot carry on with its normal operations and remain profitable. These assets represent core assets.

Core assets are required by companies to keep their operations running smoothly, and help them generate revenue.

What Are Core Assets?

Core assets include all assets including essential, important, or valuable property without which a company cannot carry on with its normal operations and remain profitable. Core assets are required to help the company generate revenue.

These assets can be financed by long-term capital, such as bonds or by taking out debt. Core current assets may also be referred to as hardcore working capital.

In other parts of the financial world, core assets may also refer to the key investment vehicles an investor holds in his portfolio such as stocks and bonds.

Core assets are required by companies to keep their operations running smoothly, and help them generate revenue.
These assets are can be financed by long-term capital or debt.
Examples of core assets may include tangible assets such as machinery, production facilities, and intangible assets such as intellectual property.
Companies that are forced to sell their core assets are generally liquidating or about to go bankrupt.

Understanding Core Assets

As part of defining and executing a business strategy, a firm will require assets that are necessary to carry out this strategy. These assets represent core assets. These assets are thus crucial to the continued financial success of a business. In short, they help a company run smoothly and stay viable. They will always be indicated in a PERT chart.

A company needs these core assets to build its revenue base and remain profitable. They may be tangible assets such as machinery, production facilities, distribution and storage outlets, or even affiliates and subsidiaries of a parent company. Core assets may also be intangible such as trademarks, patents, or intellectual property.

These essential inputs to production differ from discretionary assets, which as are often deemed nice to have but not essential to carry out central day to day functions.

Without its core assets, a business would dissolve. Companies that sell off core assets are usually liquidating and on the verge of bankruptcy. Companies that have trouble financially tend to initially raise money by selling off non-core assets instead of core assets. These are assets that are not essential to the continued functioning of a business.

Examples of Core Assets

Businesses operating in various industries or geographic regions will carry different sets of core assets. For instance, a beer manufacturer from the consumer staples sector may require specialized equipment as a core asset. A software design business from the information technology sector, on the other hand, will list intellectual property as a core asset, even though it is technically intangible in nature.

Analysts and investors monitor a business's core assets for material change or worrisome trends. When business activity slows, businesses may reluctantly sell-off core assets to raise capital for current liabilities. This creates the potential for adverse business outcomes because central inputs to production may not be available at a later date.

Core Assets vs. Non-Core Assets

As discussed above, core assets are required to keep a business running smoothly and to remain profitable. This is in contrast to its non-core assets. These can be assets that are not essential or no longer useful to the operation of the business and can be sold at any time when it is going through financial difficulty.

What constitutes a non-core asset — or a core asset — depends on the nature of the business. Non-core assets can be currencies, real estate, commodities, natural resources, or even a subsidiary.

What constitutes a core asset and a non-core asset depends on the nature of the business.

Related terms:

Active Asset

An active asset can be a tangible or intangible asset used by a business in its daily or routine business operations. read more

Amortization of Intangibles

Amortization of intangibles is the process of expensing the cost of an intangible asset over the projected life of the asset. read more

Asset

An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual or corporation owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit. read more

Bond : Understanding What a Bond Is

A bond is a fixed income investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. read more

Hard-To-Sell Asset

A hard-to-sell asset is an asset that is difficult for a company to dispose of.  read more

Liability

A liability is something a person or company owes, usually a sum of money. read more

Long-Term Investments

A long-term investment is an account on the asset side of a company's balance sheet that represents the investments that a company intends to hold for more than a year. read more

Manufacturing

Manufacturing is the processing of raw materials into finished goods using tools and processes. read more

Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)

Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) refers to the consolidation of companies or assets through various types of financial transactions. read more

Non-Core Assets

Non-core assets are assets that are either not essential or simply no longer used in a company's business operations.  read more