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Principles of Finance Videos 166 videos

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Company Formation, Structure, Inception
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How is a company... born? Can it be performed via C-section? Is there a midwife present? Do its parents get in a fight over what to name it? In thi...

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Intro: Company Formation, Structure, and Inception: Unit Intro
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Company Formation, Structure, and Inception: Unit Intro. Sorry, Leo DiCaprio fans—we're not going to be breaking down the plot of Inception. We'r...

Principles of Finance: Unit 1, Alex, That’s Finance Potpourri for $500
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Okay, so you want to be a company financial manager. It's basically up to you to make money for the shareholders. It would also be swell if you mad...

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Principles of Finance: Unit 2, Measuring Sticks 14 Views


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Description:

There are certain mathematical tools we use to inspect whether a company or investment is doing well, or... not. Here are a few of those tools, comin' at ya.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

principles of finance a la shmoop. investment measuring sticks. alright

00:08

people well over a long period of time both company management and investing [men smile in a fancy room]

00:13

management have grown, you know sophisticated. in the same way a NASCAR

00:17

team inspects engine heat rpm tire pressure and so on we have similar

00:21

mathematical tools to inspect whether a company or an investing thing is doing

00:26

well or not. we'll come back to these tools in depth throughout the course but

00:30

let's start with some analysis of company performance all right well to

00:34

start we'll make up a silly little income statement for the silly little

00:38

lemonade stand, lemonade stands R US right here

00:41

revenues and revenues expenses all this stuff right there. got it ? okay so let's [income statement shown]

00:45

just plow through this simple income statement and make a few observations

00:48

that'll hopefully shine lights where things are dark in your brain. well how

00:53

much did we sell a single drink for in 2020? a buck. we sold 20,000 units and

00:59

took $20,000 in revenues in the door using advanced calculus that's a buck a

01:04

drink. got it? why the $19,000 net revenue thing? what is net here? net of what? what

01:10

is net revenues? well we had a number of people paying us using a credit card and

01:16

Visa and MasterCard don't just have corporate jets for doing nothing

01:19

somebody has to pay for them, right? so a good chunk of our business had us [plane taking off]

01:23

collect a dollar pay a nickel to the credit card company and then we keep

01:27

ninety-five cents of that drink for ourselves. but that doesn't account for a

01:32

full thousand dollars taken off of gross revenues or total revenue, so what gives?

01:36

well sadly a number of people took a sip spit out the fine formula lemonade and

01:42

well they demanded their money back. we lost the nickel of that cup when they

01:46

did that so a few hundred bucks were just lost cups and lost the drinkage. [equation pictured]

01:51

so that's why we get a net revenue number. it's 19 grand that we collected

01:56

in revenues, not 20 that we billed for. yeah that works very clever all right.

02:01

and as a percentage of our profits well it was a big loss note that we spent 3

02:05

grand on our product which we're defining us you know cups and liquid. we

02:10

could have included rent because well we need a place to sell lemonade, but it's a

02:14

just a street corner, really in front of our house, so we're not going to include

02:18

it in the must-have things to sell our product category, and usually that's the

02:24

delimiter in what you'd include in gross profits. so we had 19 K in net revenues

02:28

and 16 K in gross profits. all right will our gross profit margin then what 16

02:34

over 19. nice high margin and lemonade drinks. it would be rational if you [equation showing profits]

02:39

wanted to keep $20,000 as the denominator you could in fact take as an

02:44

expense the visa bills and the bad drink bills and stuff like that. someday maybe

02:49

you'll have zero lemonade's to spit out or have a hundred percent of your drinks

02:53

paid for in cash. so if you wanted to say that gross margin was really sixteen

02:57

over twenty equals eighty percent well there'd be no rancor here in the

03:01

hallways that'd be a vaunted du shmoop Wall Street corridors. [ man smiles in hallway]

03:04

all right well key concept here is the difference between a profit dollar

03:07

amount and the profit margin. got it? a profit dollar amount was sixteen

03:12

thousand the profit margin was sixteen over twenty. PS margins are always a

03:18

percentage. remember that. all right well rent labor and marketing you're all

03:21

below the line expenses. all right well what line ?the gross profit line. that

03:26

thing right there well that whole above and below the line things actually a big

03:29

deal in Hollywood as a weird sidebar here a weird as that sounds from from

03:34

shmoop and no extra charge here for telling you about this. profit

03:38

participants ie the movie stars directors and producers are above the [gross profits line explained]

03:42

line players, versus grips gaffers sound boon microphone holders truck drivers

03:48

and people like that. why? well because above the line players compensation is

03:52

usually variable. ie it hinges on how well or poorly the film does at the box

03:57

office and beyond. you get profit participation when you're

04:01

a player right but whatever that's a sidebar moving on. we have 8k in pre-tax

04:06

profits here from our lemonade stand. this is also called operating profits.

04:10

yeah well that's the profit we make from operating the business .why report a

04:15

pre-tax number versus just ignoring it? and reporting the net after taxes. taxes

04:21

vary from state to state from country to country and from year to [map of the U.S.]

04:25

year and most companies want to be comparable on an apple to apples basis

04:29

not to apples to kumquats. all right well that line is also important as financial

04:33

managers like the future you think about trying to find ways to pay less in taxes.

04:38

note that the operating margin of the company is 8 K over 19 K or 20 K

04:43

depending on how you think about the real revenues realized, but keep the

04:47

mapped easier let's look at the $20,000 total revenues will gross up our number

04:51

and call the operating margin 40%. that's 8 over 20. all right. then we have taxes.

04:57

all right. well we made up the 25% tax number but it's a good proxy for what [taxes defined]

05:01

most corporations pay ,other than Apple at least you know who's based in Ireland

05:06

so they avoid an enormous amount of taxes. good good on them. all right well

05:09

the bottom line or net income of 6 K gives us a net profit margin or net

05:14

margin of 6 divided by 20 or 30%. very high profit margins for a drink company.

05:21

of course once the kids manage to score themselves a liquor license and start

05:25

churning outside mama's house hard lemonade, well then the only thing higher

05:30

than their margins will be their cleaning bill. [row of kegs in front of smiling child]

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