In AP Business, equity financing is funding a business gets by issuing ownership shares to investors, who become part owners and receive a portion of future profits and decision-making control in exchange for their cash.
Equity financing is one of the two main ways a business raises external money. Instead of borrowing cash and paying it back with interest, you sell a slice of your company. Investors hand over financial capital, and in return they get ownership shares and become part owners of the business (EK 3.5.B.1.ii).
The trade-off is real: you don't owe anybody a repayment, but you give up some control over decisions and a cut of future profits. If a tech startup sells 30% of the company to venture capitalists for $500,000, those investors now own 30% of everything, including the profits. That's the core idea behind EK 3.5.B.1, which splits most financial capital into two buckets, loans and equity financing.
Equity financing lives in Unit 3, Topic 3.5 (Financial Capital). It's central to learning objective AP Business 3.5.B, where you determine the potential sources of capital a business can use. It also connects to 3.5.A (why businesses seek outside money in the first place) and 3.5.C (what investors get back for taking the risk). The big theme here is the loan-versus-equity choice. Every funding decision in this unit comes down to whether a business wants debt it must repay or partners it must share with.
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view galleryBusiness Loans (Unit 3)
Loans are equity financing's twin from EK 3.5.B.1. A loan must be repaid with interest and you keep full ownership; equity financing never gets repaid but costs you a share of the company. Same goal, opposite trade-offs.
Stock and Dividends (Unit 3)
When a corporation does equity financing, the ownership shares it issues are stock. Investors who hold that stock can earn dividends, which are their slice of the company's profits (EK 3.5.C.3). Equity financing is basically the company side of buying stock.
Bootstrapping (Unit 3)
Before any outside equity, many entrepreneurs fund startup costs with personal savings, personal loans, and credit (EK 3.5.A.1). That's bootstrapping. Equity financing is the step you take when bootstrapping isn't enough to cover startup and operating costs.
The Pitch to Investors (Unit 3)
To get equity financing, you pitch a business plan with your value proposition, market research, and financial projections (EK 3.5.D.1). Investors want to see the expected rate of return before they trade cash for ownership.
On multiple-choice questions, you'll get a scenario and have to name the funding type. The tell for equity financing is always ownership shares: "a restaurant owner receives $50,000 from investors in exchange for ownership shares" or "founders sell 30% ownership to venture capital investors for $500,000." If the scenario mentions interest and repayment instead, that's a loan, not equity. If it's personal savings and credit cards, that's bootstrapping. For free-response, you may need to recommend a funding source and justify it, weighing the loss of control under equity against the repayment obligation of a loan.
Both raise external capital, but the cost is completely different. A loan must be repaid with interest and you keep 100% ownership and control. Equity financing is never repaid, but you give up ownership shares, a cut of future profits, and some say in decisions. Loans cost you money over time; equity costs you control and profit forever.
Equity financing means raising money by selling ownership shares, not by borrowing.
Investors who provide equity become part owners and get a portion of future profits and decision-making control (EK 3.5.B.1.ii).
Unlike a loan, equity financing is never repaid and charges no interest, but it permanently dilutes your ownership.
On the exam, the keyword for equity financing is always 'ownership shares' or a percentage of the company.
Equity and loans are the two main categories of external financial capital under learning objective AP Business 3.5.B.
Equity financing is when a business raises money by issuing ownership shares to investors, who become part owners in exchange for their cash (EK 3.5.B.1.ii). The business never repays the money but gives up a share of profits and control.
No. That's the key difference from a loan. With equity financing there's no repayment and no interest, because investors aren't lending you money, they're buying part of your company and betting on future profits.
A loan must be repaid with interest and you keep full ownership; equity financing is never repaid but you hand over ownership shares, a slice of future profits, and some decision-making control (EK 3.5.B.1). Debt costs money over time, equity costs ownership.
No. Funding a startup with your own savings, personal loans, or personal credit is called bootstrapping (EK 3.5.A.1). Equity financing specifically involves outside investors getting ownership shares in return.
They get ownership shares (stock), which can earn dividends, their share of the company's profits, and can be resold in a secondary market for a possible capital gain (EK 3.5.C.1 and 3.5.C.3).
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