In AP Business, an investor is someone who provides financial capital to a business through equity financing, becoming a part owner in exchange for a share of future profits (dividends) and the potential for capital gains.
An investor gives a business money and, in return, gets a piece of the company. This is equity financing (EK 3.5.B.1.ii). Unlike a lender, who just wants the loan paid back with interest, an investor buys ownership shares. That means they get a cut of future profits and a say (however small) in how the business is run.
When an investor hands over financial capital, they receive a financial asset, specifically shares of stock (EK 3.5.C.1). They can make money two ways. First, through dividends, which are their share of the company's profits (EK 3.5.C.3). Second, by reselling the stock for more than they paid, which is a capital gain. Here's the catch: the business doesn't owe the investor anything guaranteed. If the company tanks, the investor can lose everything. That risk is the price of potentially higher returns than a lender would ever see.
Investors live in Topic 3.5 Financial Capital (Unit 3: Business Finance and Accounting). They show up across three learning objectives. AP Business 3.5.B asks you to identify investors as a source of capital through equity financing. AP Business 3.5.C asks you to describe the benefits and risks investors take on. And AP Business 3.5.D asks you to build and evaluate a pitch aimed at investors. The big idea: a business that needs money but can't or won't take on debt can trade ownership for cash. Understanding what an investor wants (a return that beats the risk) is the heart of every funding decision in this unit.
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Visual cheatsheet
view galleryLender (Unit 3)
A lender and an investor both hand a business money, but they want totally different things. A lender wants the loan repaid with interest and gets nothing extra if the company booms. An investor gives up that guarantee for a slice of ownership and the upside of growing profits.
Equity Financing (Unit 3)
Equity financing is simply the method; the investor is the person on the other end of it. Every time a business raises money by selling ownership shares instead of borrowing, an investor is the one buying in.
Dividend and Capital Gain (Unit 3)
These are the two payoffs an investor hopes for. A dividend is a slice of current profits the company chooses to pay out; a capital gain is the profit from selling the stock later for more than you paid. Some companies skip dividends and reinvest, betting the stock price (and your capital gain) will grow instead.
Pitching to Prospective Investors (Unit 3)
Under 3.5.D, a business plan and polished pitch exist to convince investors a venture is worth the risk. The investor's whole decision comes down to one question: is the expected return high enough to justify what I could lose?
Multiple-choice questions love to test whether you can spot equity financing versus a loan. A classic stem describes a startup selling 30% ownership to venture capital investors for $500,000 and asks which funding method that is (answer: equity financing, and the people providing it are investors). Another asks what to call the $50,000 a restaurant owner receives from investors in exchange for ownership shares. The trap is mixing this up with a bank loan, where the money must be repaid with interest. No released FRQ uses "investor" word for word, but the term anchors the pitch-evaluation tasks under 3.5.D, where you weigh a funding request's risk and return. Be ready to explain why an investor takes on more risk than a lender and what they get for it.
Both provide financial capital, but the relationship is opposite. A lender gives a loan that must be repaid with interest and earns nothing if profits soar. An investor buys ownership through equity financing, gives up the repayment guarantee, and instead earns dividends and capital gains, sharing in both the upside and the loss.
An investor provides financial capital through equity financing and becomes a part owner of the business.
Investors earn money two ways: dividends (a share of profits) and capital gains (selling stock for more than they paid).
Unlike a lender, an investor is not guaranteed repayment and can lose the entire investment if the business fails.
Investors receive a financial asset (stock) that can be resold in a secondary market.
On the exam, if a business sells ownership shares for cash, the funding source is an investor and the method is equity financing.
An investor is someone who provides financial capital to a business through equity financing, becoming a part owner in exchange for ownership shares. They can earn returns through dividends (a share of profits) or capital gains (reselling stock at a higher price).
No. A lender gives a loan that must be repaid with interest and earns nothing extra if the company does well. An investor buys ownership through equity financing, isn't guaranteed repayment, and instead shares in the company's profits and risk.
Two ways. First, through dividends, which are the investor's share of the business's profits. Second, through capital gains, by selling their stock for more than they paid for it. Some companies pay no dividends and reinvest earnings, so the investor relies on the stock price rising.
A business seeks investors when it needs capital but can't or doesn't want to take on debt and required interest payments. The trade-off is giving up some ownership, future profits, and control over decisions in exchange for funding that doesn't have to be repaid like a loan.
Under learning objective 3.5.D, investors usually require a business plan with a value proposition, market research, marketing strategy, and financial projections that justify the funding request, expected rate of return, and level of risk. For an established business, they also examine its financial reports.
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