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Ann225 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

In kind contribution/investment

Hi,

If a shareholder makes an investment in a company (contribution) which is not cash, can it be called either ‘in kind investment’ or ‘in kind contribution’?

Thank you.

  

Top answer

A contribution in-kind is apparently a non-monetary contribution to a charity, for example, you give your Van Gogh painting to charity. An investment in-kind is apparently an exchange of a non-monetary item for company stock, for example, you exchange your Van Gogh painting for shares in the company of equivalent value.

  • A contribution in-kind is apparently a non-monetary contribution to a charity, for example, you give your Van Gogh painting to charity.
  • An investment in-kind is apparently an exchange of a non-monetary item for company stock, for example, you exchange your Van Gogh painting for shares in the company of equivalent value.
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1 Answers
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A contribution in-kind is apparently a non-monetary contribution to a charity, for example, you give your Van Gogh painting to charity. An investment in-kind is apparently an exchange of a non-monetary item for company stock, for example, you exchange your Van Gogh painting for shares in the company of equivalent value.

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