1. Working capital loans are loans issued to meet the temporary and seasonal capital needs of customers in the production and operation process and to ensure the normal progress of production and operation activities, or loans issued by banks to borrowers. Loans designed to meet long-term average working capital needs during production and operation. 2. After a company decides to raise funds through bonds, it must then consider what type of bonds to issue and the conditions for issuing bonds. The conditions for bond issuance refer to the relevant factors that a bond issuer must consider when issuing bonds to raise funds, including the issuance amount, face value, term, repayment method, coupon rate, interest payment method, issuance price, issuance fees, whether there is guarantee, etc. 3. Additional stock issuance refers to the issuance of new shares by a company due to the need to increase capital for business development. After the additional issuance, the company's registered capital will increase accordingly. If the incremental capital fails to produce corresponding benefits during the accounting period, it will lead to a decrease in earnings per share (dilution effect) and contribute to a fall in the stock price; from another perspective, if the additional issuance price is higher than the additional issuance, If the net assets per share were previously increased, the additional issuance may lead to an increase in the company's net assets per share, which is conducive to rising stock prices. Furthermore, the additional issuance generally increases the total number of outstanding shares. In the short term, if there is no corresponding increase in demand for stock supply, , the shares may fall.