Regulatory Capital
Definition
The minimum amount of capital that financial institutions must hold as required by regulators, serving as a buffer against potential losses. Regulatory capital requirements influence how intangible assets — particularly goodwill — are treated on bank balance sheets and affect the valuation of financial services businesses.
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside Regulatory Capital in practice.
A measure of how much capital is required to generate a unit of revenue, calculated as total assets divided by total revenue. Companies with high intangible asset bases may report misleadingly low capital intensity because many intangible investments are expensed rather than capitalised on the balance sheet.
The process by which firms and economies accumulate intangible capital through investment in R&D, software development, training, brand building, and organisational design. Intangible capital formation is now the dominant form of business investment in advanced economies, yet it is only partially captured by national accounts and corporate balance sheets.
An increase in the amount of capital available per worker, which typically raises labour productivity. In modern economies, capital deepening increasingly involves investment in intangible assets such as software, data infrastructure, and organisational systems rather than traditional machinery and equipment.
The weighted average cost of capital, representing the blended rate of return a company must earn on its assets to satisfy both debt holders and equity investors. WACC is used as the discount rate in DCF valuations and as a hurdle rate for investment decisions.
The value embedded in a company's proprietary software assets, including applications, platforms, tools, and codebases. Software capital is a major intangible asset category that drives automation, scalability, and competitive differentiation in technology-enabled businesses.
Funds spent to acquire, upgrade, or maintain physical assets such as property, plant, and equipment. CapEx is capitalised on the balance sheet and depreciated over time, in contrast to operating expenditure which is expensed immediately.
An adjustment applied to the standard WACC to reflect the additional risk associated with specific intangible assets or early-stage businesses. Intangible-heavy investments typically warrant a higher discount rate than the firm-level WACC because their cash flows are less certain and more sensitive to competitive and technological disruption.
The amount by which a company's net working capital exceeds the level required to sustain its normal business operations. In M&A transactions, excess working capital increases enterprise value (and therefore equity value) because it represents surplus cash or near-cash resources available to the buyer beyond what is needed to run the business.
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