Definitions on Income Statements
Here is a brief synopsis of key financial terms for introductory finance majors and business folks regarding income statements and balance sheets. Firstly, defining some terms:
Income Statement : A statement measuring a firm’s financial performance over a period of time. Generally, it records revenues and expenses to derive income over a specified period
Balance Sheet : This analysis sheet provides a “snapshot” at a point of time of the firm’s health in terms of total assets (what do they own), total liabilities (what do they owe), and equity (how much of the firm’s assets are financed by the owners).
The basic idea for financial statements is to make decisions and provide information on the firm. At the most essential element you seek: Revenue – Expenses = Income
The time period can vary, perhaps monthly, quarterly, or annually.
Financial Statement Formulas:
Sales (Revenue) – Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) – operating costs and depreciation = Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT)
– interest paid = Earnings Before Tax (EBT) or taxable income – Taxes = NET INCOME (NI)
Highlights: The initial thing reported on an income statement is revenue & expenses from the firm’s principal operations. Revenue – operating expenses = EBITI
Subsequent parts include the financial expenses (interest paid), Taxable income (EBT), Taxes paid. Combine them all and you are left with the last item: Net income.
About Revenue: Also called sales or net sales, revenue is what a business earns for the sale of its products and/or services. Therefore in a basic formula:
Net Sales = Gross sales – Returned products – Discounts taken for prompt payments of invoices – Allowances made for damaged products
About the Expenses: Let’s talk briefly about expenses including the Cost of Goods Sold (COGS). COGS is the cost incurred in making or producing the goods that were sold (also called Cost of Sales). The value captures manufacturing expenses for the products sold. So that would mean: raw material + labor + factory overhead (which includes utility, property taxes, insurance, etc.)
Also included in expenses is operating costs, also called G&A (General & Administrative) expenses. Selling expenses, marketing expenses and Administration which includes: Selling: salespeople’s salaries, bonuses, office expenses, etc; Marketing: promotions, advertising, marketing research, salaries, etc.; Administrative: corporate & divisional staff, executive compensation, R&D, etc.
Don’t forget depreciation is not treated the same. Equipment and building and land = NO depreciation, (and when you depreciate never goes to zero; depreciation also becomes part of cash flow.)
Switching gears let’s talk more specifically about Net Income (NI), in this case on a per-share basis. The formula would be: Earnings per share (EPS) = NI / # of common shares. This changes when you consider distribution of Net Income, then the formula is: Net Income = Dividend paid to shareholders + Addition to Retained Earnings. When you consider the stock market: market price / earnings per share = P/E ratio.
This discussion continues with a discussion on earnings per share and dilution.