In AP Business, an investing activity is a section of the cash flow statement that records cash inflows and outflows from buying or selling long-term assets, like equipment, property, or investments.
An investing activity is one of the three buckets that make up a business's cash flow statement (topic 3.8). It tracks the cash a business spends or receives when it buys or sells long-term assets, things the company plans to use for more than a year. Buying new machinery, purchasing property, or acquiring stock in another company are cash outflows here. Selling off old equipment or cashing in an investment brings cash in.
Think of it as the "big-ticket" section. Operating activities cover the day-to-day cash (paying for supplies, collecting from customers), but investing activities cover the major purchases that set up the business for the future. When a company drops a pile of cash on a new factory, that shows up as a large outflow in investing activities, which can make total cash look negative even when the business is doing fine.
This term lives in Unit 3: Personal Saving and Borrowing / Business Finance and Accounting, specifically topic 3.8 The Cash Flow Statement. It directly supports learning objective AP Business 3.8.A (determine and describe components of a business's cash flow statement) because investing activity is one of those required components. It also feeds into AP Business 3.8.B, since stakeholders read the investing section to see whether a company is growing (spending on assets) or shrinking (selling them off). Knowing which transactions belong in this bucket versus the operating or financing buckets is exactly the kind of sorting the exam asks you to do.
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Visual cheatsheet
view galleryCash Flow Statement (Unit 3)
Investing activity is one of three sections inside the cash flow statement. The other two are operating and financing. You can't understand the whole statement without knowing which transactions land in each bucket.
Operating Activity (Unit 3)
Operating activity is the everyday cash from running the business, like collecting from customers and paying suppliers. Investing activity is the opposite vibe, covering the occasional big purchases and sales of long-term assets.
Financing Activity (Unit 3)
Financing activity tracks cash from raising money (loans, issuing stock) and paying it back. The trick: buying stock in another company is investing, but issuing your own stock to raise cash is financing.
Cash Inflow and Cash Outflow (Unit 3)
Every line in the investing section is either an inflow or an outflow. Selling an asset is an inflow; buying one is an outflow. These two ideas are the building blocks of the whole statement.
Expect to sort transactions into the right cash flow section. A multiple-choice stem might describe a company buying new equipment and ask which activity it falls under, or hand you a list of items and ask which one is an investing activity. You may also need to explain how a large investing outflow affects the overall cash balance, tying back to EK 3.8.B.2 about negative cash flow. No released FRQ has used this exact term verbatim, but the skill it builds (reading and interpreting a cash flow statement) is the kind of thing 3.8.A and 3.8.B questions reward. Be ready to say WHY a transaction is investing rather than operating or financing.
Both involve big chunks of cash, so they get mixed up. The clean rule: investing activity is about buying or selling assets (equipment, property, investments in other companies). Financing activity is about how the business raises and repays its own funding (loans, issuing or buying back its own stock, paying dividends). If the cash relates to an asset the company owns, it's investing. If it relates to how the company funds itself, it's financing.
Investing activity is one of the three sections of a cash flow statement, alongside operating and financing activities.
It records cash from buying or selling long-term assets, like equipment, property, or stock in other companies.
Buying an asset is a cash outflow; selling an asset is a cash inflow.
A big investing outflow can make total cash look low even when the business is healthy, because it's spending on future growth.
Don't confuse investing with financing: investing is about assets, financing is about how the company funds itself.
It's the section that tracks cash a business spends or receives from buying or selling long-term assets, such as equipment, property, or investments in other companies. Purchases are outflows and sales are inflows.
Buying equipment is an investing activity, not operating. Equipment is a long-term asset, so its purchase belongs in the investing section. Operating activities cover everyday cash like paying suppliers and collecting from customers.
Investing activity is about buying or selling assets the company owns, like machinery or shares in another business. Financing activity is about how the company raises and repays its own money, like taking loans, issuing its own stock, or paying dividends.
Yes. A large purchase, like a new factory, creates a big cash outflow in the investing section. This can push total cash flow negative even if the business is profitable, because the company is spending on future growth.
Yes, it's part of topic 3.8 and supports learning objectives AP Business 3.8.A and 3.8.B. You may need to sort transactions into the correct cash flow section or explain how investing outflows affect a company's cash balance.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.