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I figure now is as good a time
as any to learn about probably
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what most people focus the
most on when they analyze
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companies, and that's the
income statement.
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And the income statement is
one of the three financial
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statements that you'll look at
when you look at a company.
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There's the income statement
and the other two are the
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balance sheet, which I have
drawn a lot in a lot of the
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other explanations I've done
on the financial crisis and
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whatever else.
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And actually, in this video,
we're going to see how the
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income statement relates
to the balance sheet.
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And, of course, the last one--
well, it's not of course if
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you don't know it-- is the
cash flow statement.
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And we'll focus on that a
little bit later because
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that's a little bit more
nuanced relative
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to the income statement.
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So the income statement is
literally just saying how much
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a company might earn in a given
period, and it's always
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related to a period.
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So it could be an annual
income statement.
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It could be for the year 2008.
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It could be a quarterly
income statement.
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Those are usually the two
types that you see, but
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sometimes, there's monthly or
six-month income statements.
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And the general format is pretty
consistent, although
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there is a lot of variation
depending on what a business
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does, but in this video, I
really just want to cover
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almost a plain vanilla income
statement for a company that
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just sells a widget.
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So the first thing when you sell
a widget is you make it
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and you just sell it.
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You sell the widget.
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You give a customer a widget,
and they give you some money.
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And that money that they give
you-- and I'm not going to get
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too technical about the
accounting right now-- is
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considered revenue.
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It's sometimes considered
sales.
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And that's literally the money
that they give you at a
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certain period of time.
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And some of you accountants out
there are like, oh, well,
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no, that's not just the money
that they give you.
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It's the money that you've
earned in a certain period of
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time, and that's true.
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But for our sake, let's just
say that when you give the
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widget, you have earned the
money that they give you, and
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that's revenue sales.
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Later on, we'll talk about
different ways to account
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revenue and sales.
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So let's say the revenue or the
sales in this case in a
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given period, let's say
that this is an income
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statement for 2008.
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So over 2008, we sold
let's say $3
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million worth of widgets.
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So let's say it's $3 million.
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And a lot of times when you look
at income statements for
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companies, if you go to Yahoo!
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Finance, you could do this right
now, instead of writing
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$3 million, you'll
see $3,000 there.
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It's like, oh, my God!
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This company, they're hardly
selling anything.
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But it's kind of a standard that
they tend to write things
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in thousands.
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So 3,000 would be
3,000 thousands,
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which would be 3 million.
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And for really big companies,
they actually sometimes write
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their numbers in millions.
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So if you saw 3,000 there, it
would actually mean 3 billion.
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But we'll actually look at real
income statements in the
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not-too-far-off future.
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So that's how much money
they give us.
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But that's not how much income
we made, because there was a
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lot of cost that went into
making that widget that we
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have to account for.
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It's not like when someone gives
me $3 million, I can
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just say, oh, I made
$3 million.
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Let me just put it
all in the bank.
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I'm done.
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That was all income.
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So the first thing that you
tend to see on an income
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statement is the cost of those
actual widgets, the cost of
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producing those widgets.
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And I'll put all my expenses
in magenta.
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So it'll sometimes be written
as cost of sales or cost of
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goods sold.
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And this is literally-- well,
there's two things.
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There's a variable cost which
is, each widget, they might
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have used some amount of metal
and some amount of energy to
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produce it and some
amount of paint if
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it's a painted widget.
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And so that the cost of goods
is literally how much did it
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cost to buy the metal and the
paint and provide the
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electricity to make those $3
million worth of widgets.
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That's the variable cost. And
then on top of that you have
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the fixed costs, or the
relatively fixed costs, where
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just to have the factory open,
it costs a certain amount of
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money every year, regardless of
how many widgets you make.
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And we'll go into more detail
on that, But for simplicity,
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let's say all those costs
of making the
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widgets were $1 million.
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So sometimes someone might say
it's a $1 million cost. When I
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make models, I like to put
a minus there, so that I
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remember that that's a cost.
Anything that detracts from
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income I put as a minus.
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Anything that adds is a plus,
although that's not
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necessarily the standard
convention.
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Some people say, oh, it's a
positive $1 million cost,
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which means you subtract.
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But either way I think
you get the point.
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And then if you subtract your
costs from your revenue, or if
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you just add these two numbers,
because this one is
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negative, you have your
gross profit.
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And in this case, it would
be $2 million.
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And this number tells you, how
much money did you make, or
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how much profit did
you make just from
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selling these widgets?
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So the more widgets you sell,
in most circumstances, the
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larger this number
is going to be.
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So this is your profit before
all of the other expenses that
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a company has to incur,
like the taxes
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and the CEO's salary.
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The CEO's salary doesn't
go in here, right?
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Because the CEO doesn't go out
there to the factory in most
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cases and actually help
make the widget.
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So the CEO's salary or the
CFO's salary or the
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headquarters in a nice
skyscraper, that doesn't get
-
factored in here.
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Or the marketing
expense, right?
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You have to tell people, hey,
we make good widgets.
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So none of that is
factored in here.
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So that goes into
the next line.
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And oftentimes, you'll see it
broken up, where they'll have
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marketing expense.
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Sometimes you have to pay
salespeople, so you might have
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sales expense, and then the
stuff like the corporate
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office and the CEO's salary, and
you have to hire auditors
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and accountants and
all of that.
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That might be included
as general.
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Actually, I should be doing this
in magenta because it's
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all expenses.
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Marketing, sales, and then
G&A you'll sometimes see.
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Sometimes you'll see SG&A.
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G&A just stands for general and
administrative expenses.
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If you see SG&A-- sometimes
instead of that you'll see
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SG&A-- that mean selling,
general and
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administrative expenses.
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Selling is things like, it could
be the commissions that
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the salespeople get.
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It could be just the cost of
having salespeople travel
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around the country and taking
people out to steak dinners.
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And then the general and
administrative, that's just
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all the stuff that the corporate
office does, and all
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the people who are
at that level.
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So if you subtract these, and
I'm just making up these
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numbers as I go.
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Say, in marketing, the company
is spending $500,000.
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And I'm putting it as a minus
because I like to remember
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it's an expense.
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Some models you'll
see, they'll say
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it's $500,000 expense.
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Sales, let's say, this
is just G&A here.
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I want to make a separate
line for sales.
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So let's say sales, selling
expenses is $200,000.
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And let's say G&A, the corporate
offices and all of
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that, let's see that's
another $300,000.
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And now we're ready to figure
out how much money did the
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operations of this
business make?
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So this is operating profit.
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This is really important to pay
attention to, because so
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many people say, oh, a company
made this much.
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And you'll hear these numbers,
gross and operating profit and
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net profit and pretax profit,
and it's very hard to
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understand that these are
actually very, very different
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things, because they all have
the word "profit," and what
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does gross and operating
and all that mean?
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But here you see it means very,
very different things.
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Let's calculate this number
first before I go off on one
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of my tangents on all the
differences between the
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operating and the
gross profit.
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But let's see, 2 million
minus 1 million.
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My head I think implicitly
made the
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numbers work out nicely.
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So my operating profit
here is $1 million.
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So already we have some
new nuance on profit.
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I made $2 million just from
actual widget sales, but then
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when you take out all of the
overhead of the company, the
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marketing, the sales, the
general and administrative
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expenses, I'm only left
with $1 million.
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And this is the profit from the
operations of the company,
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or you could say from the assets
or from the business or
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from the enterprise
of the company.
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That's what it is generating.
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But we can see-- I've drawn a
bunch of balance sheets before
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and I think this is a good time
to draw a balance sheet.
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So you have kind of the
assets of a company.
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And we'll talk a little bit
more about assets and
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enterprise value, and there's
a little bit of a nuance
-
there, but essentially
the company itself.
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Before you think about how the
company is paid for or how
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it's funded, if you just think
about the enterprise itself,
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the assets.
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The assets are generating
this.
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They're generating the operating
profit, and that's a
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very important thing to realize
in the future when we
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talk about return on assets.
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Actually, we could talk
about it now.
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Let's say our assets, if we
paid $10 million for these
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assets, and these assets-- this
is the income statement
-
for 2008-- are spitting out $1
million a year, or at least $1
-
million in this year, our return
on asset-- I wasn't
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planning on introducing this,
but it doesn't hurt to
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introduce it right now-- our
return on asset, often
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acronymed ROA, would be-- well,
the numerator is the
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return, which is $1 million.
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The denominator is the
assets, $10 million.
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So we got a 10% return
on our assets.
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For a $10 million investment,
we're getting
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$1 million a year.
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We're getting 10% of our asset
investment back every year.
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So that's a nice thing to keep
in the back of your mind, this
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return on asset concept, and
it's very closely tied to
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operating profits and the
actual assets of a firm.
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What we've learned, and
especially if you watched some
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of my other economics videos,
that all companies aren't
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financed the same.
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A lot of them might
have some debt.
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So let's say that company had
$10 million of assets, but
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let's say they paid for it
with $5 million of debt.
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And let's say the interest rate
on that debt is-- let me
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think of a good number-- 5%.
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Let's make it easier.
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Let's make it 10% interest.
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So this is the operating
profit.
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This is the money that just
comes out of the asset itself.
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But, of course, that's not the
money that we get to take
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home, because we have to pay
this interest. So let's throw
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that in there as an expense.
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Interest expense.
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And obviously, a company that
has no debt will have no
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interest expense, but
in this case, we do.
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And this is an annual
income statement.
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So let's see, if we have $5
million of debt, and we're
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paying 10% on that, 10% of $5
million is $500,000 a year in
-
interest. So we have to
essentially take half of our
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operating profit and give
it back to the bank.
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And now we are left with our--
we're getting close to where
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we need to get to--
pre-tax income.
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And if we do the subtraction,
we're at $500,000.
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And you could guess what the
next line is going to be,
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given that this says pre-tax.
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This is what the owners of the
company get before they pay
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the government.
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So you can guess what
the next line is.
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It's going to be taxes.
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Let's say that it's a 30%
corporate tax rate, and you're
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going to take 30% of this
number right here.
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30% of that number
right there.
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So 30% of $500,000
is $150,000.
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And then we are done.
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We finally have paid off
everybody we need to pay off.
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So we started off with
$3 million up here.
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We kept paying a bunch of
expenses, and then now we're
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left with what?
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This is $350,000
of net income.
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And this is what goes to the
owners of the company.
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This net income right here.
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So going back to our balance
sheet, we had a $10 million
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asset, we had $5 million
of debt.
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We know what's left over
is the equity.
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So let me do that in
a vibrant color.
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Equity is what's left over.
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So let's say this is
all book value.
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So we have $5 million
of equity.
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And when I say book value,
that's just a fancy way of
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saying this is what our
accountants say that we paid
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for the stuff.
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This is what we have
on our books.
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And we'll talk later about
depreciation and amortization
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and how we might change what
these values are, but a very
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simple way is, if you went out
and bought $10 million worth
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of stuff, you'd write on
your books, I have
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a $10 million asset.
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And if you took a $5 million
loan, then what you really
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own, if you were to kind of sell
all of this, you would
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get $5 million of equity.
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And I think this is an
interesting thing.
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When we did return on asset,
we looked at the operating
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profit, because this is what our
company generated before
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we paid the bank or Uncle Sam
or anything like that.
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And so we took this number as
the numerator and we divided
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by the number of assets.
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Now we can do another notion,
and that's return on equity.
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In return on equity, the
numerator is the net income
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that we got, so it's $350,000.
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And the denominator here is the
equity, the book value of
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our equity, so that's
$5 million.
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One, two, three.
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One, two, three.
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Let's cancel some zeroes out.
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So it's like 35/500.
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35/500 is the same thing
is 7/100, so it equals
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7% return on equity.
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And that's interesting because,
well, why that's
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lower is-- well, I don't want
to go into too much depth
-
because I realize I'm already
pushing my time limit.
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But at this point, you should
have a good understanding of
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at least a basic income
statement of a company that
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sells widgets.
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And in the future, we're gonna
look at a lot of different
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companies, financial companies,
insurance
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companies, natural gas pipeline
companies, that will
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have very different-looking
income statements, but this
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gives you the general template
for how things work.
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And at least it'll give you a
sense of how revenues, gross
-
profit, operating profit,
pre-tax income and net income
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really are different.
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A lot of times in the
popular press.
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They're all jumbled up as just
kind of the company is making
-
this much money.
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Anyway, I'll see you
in the next video.