Income Statement - Purpose, Components, and Format
Gross Profit Margin
(Revenue - COGS) / Revenue
What is EBITDA?
A proxy for cash flow, EBITDA is earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. It can be found on the income statement by starting with EBIT and adding depreciation and amortization back.
Operating Expenses
All of the expenses involved in running the core operations of a business
Net Income Equation
Net Income = Revenues - Expenses
Examples of Operating Expenses
Rent, Insurance Premiums, and Employee Wages
Net Loss
Revenue < Expenses
Net Gain
Revenue > Expenses
Income Statement Components
Revenue, Expenses, Net Income
What is the difference between the income statement and the statement of cash flows?
The income statement is a record of revenue and expenses while the statement of cash flows records the actual cash that has either come into or left the company.
Operating Revenue
The revenue earned by a business from its normal or primary business operations.
Purpose of Income Statement
To show whether a company made or lost money in a given time period. To show the bottom-line profit of loss that the business had in a certain time period.
Non-operating Expenses
expenses that are not related to a business's normal operations
Operating Income Formula
gross profit - operating expenses
Non-operating Revenue
income which does not come from the primary goal of business
Capital Expenditure
investment spending on fixed capital assets such as the purchase of land and buildings that improves the useful life of an existing capital asset
Gross Profit
net sales - cost of goods sold
Net Income
the amount of money that is left after a company subtracts their expenses from their revenue
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
the amount that the company paid for the good or services that it sold over the course of a given time period
Expenses
the money a company pays out
Revenue
the money a company takes in
Operating Income
a figure that measures the amount of profit realized from business's operations after deducting operating expenses, such as wages depreciation and COGS