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Income Statement
Chapter 4, Slide #1
The Income Statement• Shows the results of a company’s operations
over a period of time.• What goods were sold or services performed
that provided revenue for the company?• What costs were incurred in normal operations
to generate these revenues?• What are the earnings or company profit?
The Income StatementRevenues• Assets (cash or AR) created through business
operationsExpenses• Assets (cash or AP) consumed through
business operationsNet Income or (Net Loss)• Revenues - Expenses
The Example CompanyIncome Statement
For the Years Ended December 31, 2010 and 2011
2011 2010
Revenues:Sales $100 $ 85Other revenue 30 15
Total revenues $130 $100
Expenses:Cost of goods sold $ 62 $ 58Operating & admin. 16 12Income tax 20 18
Total expenses $ 98 $ 88
Net Income $ 32 $ 12
An additional financial statement that identifies changes in retained earnings from one accounting period to the next.
Statement of Retained EarningsBeginning retained earnings
+ Net income
– Dividends paid
= Ending retained earnings
Net income results in:Increase in net assetsIncrease in retained earningsIncrease in owners’ equity
Dividends result in:Decrease in net assetsDecrease in retained
earningsDecrease in owners’ equity
The Income Statement
• Dated for a period of time– For the Year Ended...
• Multiple-step format– Gross profit
– Operating income– Income before taxes– Net income
• Single-step format– Total of all revenues and gains– Less the total of all expenses and losses
Multiple-Step Single Step
Net revenue $37,586
Cost of sales 16,742
Gross margin 20,844 Operating Expenses:
General & administrative 5,458$ Resaarch & development 5,722 Restructuring charges 710 11,890
Operating income 8,954 Interest income (expense) 488 Other gains (losses) (net) (1,756) (1,268)
Income before taxes 7,686 Provision for taxes 2,394
Net Income 5,292$
Multiple-Step CompanyIncome Statement
For the Year Ended December 31, 20XX
Net revenue 37,586$ Interest income 488 Other income -
38,074 Costs and Expenses:
Cost of sales 16,742$ General & administrative 5,458 Research & development 5,722 Other losses 1,756
Restructuring charges 710 30,388
Income before taxes 7,686 Provision for taxes 2,394
Net income 5,292$
Single-Step CompanyIncome Statement
For the Year Ended December 31, 20XX
Basic Elements of the Income Statement
• Net Sales (Revenues)• Cost of Goods Sold (Cost of Sales)• Other Operating Revenue• Research and Development• Restructuring Charges
• Impairment Charges• Operating Expenses• Other Income or Expense ( gains or losses)
• Revenue from the sale of principal goods or services sold to customers
• Shown net of– Discounts
– Returns
– Allowances
Net Sales
• The cost of goods that were sold to produce revenue (cost of services in a service company)
Retailer
Beginning Inventory
+ Purchases
– Ending Inventory
= Cost of Goods Sold
Manufacturer
Beginning Inventory
+ Cost of Goods Manufactured
– Ending Inventory
= Cost of Goods Sold
Cost of Goods Sold
• Reflects the nature of the business• Examples
– Lease revenue
– Royalty revenue
– Finance charges– Commission revenue
Other Operating Revenue
Operating Expenses
• Selling expenses– Result from the company’s effort to create sales– Examples
• Advertising• Sales commissions• Sales supplies used
• Administrative expenses– Relate to the general administration of the
company’s operation– Examples
• Salaries• Insurance• Bad debt expense
Other Income or Expense
• Secondary activities not directly related to operations– Dividend income– Interest income
– Gains (losses) from sale of assets
– Interest expense
Special Income Statement Items
• Unusual or Infrequent Items Disclosed Separately– Included with normal recurring revenues and
expenses– If material, disclosed separately, before income
taxes
– Relate to operations
– Treatment for analysis• Primary analysis: include• Supplementary analysis: exclude
Special Income Statement Items (cont’d)
• Equity in Earnings of Nonconsolidated Subsidiaries– The investor’s proportional share of the investee’s
net income– Does not represent cash flow to the investor
• Cash dividends received represent cash flow
– Analysis issues:• Investor’s net income includes revenue of other entity• May distort ratios• Presented before tax; tax consequences typically
immaterial
Special Income Statement Items (cont’d)
• Income Taxes Related to Operations– Federal, state, and local– Includes both paid and deferred taxes
• Discontinued Operations– Reported net of income tax– Analysis issues:
• Inadequate disclosure of associated assets• Lack of historical profit and loss information on the
discontinued operations
Special Income Statement Items (cont’d)
• Extraordinary Items– Unusual and infrequent– Reported net of income tax– Analysis issues:
• Exclude from primary analysis• Include for supplementary analysis
Special Income Statement Items (cont’d)
• Cumulative Effect of a Change in Accounting Principle– For fiscal years beginning before 12/15/05
• Cumulative effect of the change shown net of tax on the income statement of the period in which change was made
• Earlier statements not restated to reflect application of the new principle
– Effective for fiscal years beginning after 12/15/05• All comparative statements are retrospectively restated to
reflect application of the new accounting principle• The cumulative effect on income of earlier years is shown
as a net-of-tax adjustment to the beginning Retained Earnings balance of the earliest period presented
Special Income Statement Items (cont’d)
• Net Income-Noncontrolling Interest (prior to Dec. 31,2009 is was called Minority Share of Earnings)– Earnings of a partially-owned consolidated
subsidiary that would accrue to the minority owners
– Presentation may be either pre-tax or net-of-tax
• Earnings per ShareNet income ÷ Number of shares outstanding
Reconciliation of Retained Earnings
Beginning of year balance of retained earnings
+ Prior period adjustments (net of tax)
± Cumulative effect of a change in accounting
principle (net of tax)
= Beginning balance as adjusted
+ Net income
– Dividends
= End-of-year balance of retained earnings
Reported as part of the Statement of Stockholders’ Equity or combined with the Income Statement
Retained Earnings
• The accumulated undistributed earnings of the corporation reported on the balance sheet
• Appropriated– Restricted by law, contract, or management
decision
– Not available for dividends
• Unappropriated– Available for dividends
– Does not represent cash or any other asset
Stock Dividends
• Cash dividends– Date of declaration: create liability and reduce
retained earnings– Date of payment: reduce liability and cash
• Stock dividends– Small (less then 25%): capitalize the market value
of the stock– Material: capitalize the par value of the stock– Total equity is unaffected by a stock dividend– Analysis issues:
• Restate share quantities to reflect stock dividend activity
Stock Splits
• 2-for-1 split– Doubles the quantity of stock– Par or stated value is halved
• No effect on retained earnings, additional paid-in capital, or capital stock accounts
• Analysis issues:– Restate share quantities to reflect split activity
Legality of Distributions to Shareholders
• Per various state laws– Distributions are acceptable as long as the firm has
the ability to pay debts as they come due in the normal course of business
– Distributions to stockholders are acceptable as long as the firm is solvent and the distributions do not exceed the fair value of the assets
– Distributions consist of solvency and balance sheet test of liquidity and risk
Comprehensive Income
Net income
+ The period’s change in accumulated other comprehensive income
= Comprehensive income
• Foreign currency translation adjustments• Unrealized holding gains and losses on
available-for-sale marketable securities• Changes to stockholders’ equity resulting from
additional minimum pension liability adjustments
• Unrealized gains and losses from derivative instruments
Comprehensive Income (cont’d)
• Required disclosures– Comprehensive income– Other comprehensive income from each category
– Reclassification adjustments for each category of other comprehensive income
– Tax effects for each category of other comprehensive income
– Balances for each category of other comprehensive income
Comprehensive Income –Combined with Income Statement
Sales 230,000$ Cost of goods sold 140,000
Gross profit 90,000
Operating expenses 40,000
Operating income 50,000
Other income 4,000
Income before income taxes 54,000
Income taxes 20,000
Net income 34,000 Other comprehensive income
Available-for-sale security adjustment, net of tax 5,500 Minimum pension liability adjustment, net of tax 3,500 Foreign currency transaction adjustment, net of tax (5,000)
Other comprehensive income 4,000
Comprehensive income 38,000$
Earnings per share (for net income only) 2.80$
XYZ CorporationStatement of Income and Comprehensive Income
For the Year Ended December 31, 20XX
Comprehensive Income – Separate Statement
Net income 34,000$ Other comprehensive income
Available-for-sale security adjustment, net of tax 5,500 Minimum pension liability adjustment, net of tax 3,500 Foreign currency transaction adjustment, net of tax (5,000)
Total other comprehensive income 4,000
Comprehensive income 38,000$
XYZ CorporationStatement of Comprehensive Income
For the Year Ended December 31, 20XX
Comprehensive Income (cont’d)
• Presentation– In a separate financial statement– Combined with the income statement
– As part of the schedule of changes in stockholders’ equity
Comprehensive Income (cont’d)
• Analysis issues:– Typically more volatile than net income– A better indication of long-run profitability
Question
• Hausa Inc has sales of RM 275 000, costs of RM 175 000, depreciation expense RM 15 000, interest expense RM 6000, and a tax rate at 35%.
• What is the net income of Hausa Inc?
Chapter 4, Slide #31
Answer
• Net Sales RM 275 000• Cost RM (175 000)• Depreciation RM (15 000)
• Earning before tax RM 85 000• Interest paid RM (6000)• Taxable Income RM 79 000• Tax 35 % RM (27 650)
• Net Income RM 51 350
Chapter 4, Slide #32