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EBITDA (excl significant items) was $34m and Net Profit after tax was ($9M)
So earnings are always EBITDA and therefore not the same as net profit. Am i getting this right?
As Buffett once says, EBITDA is one of those earnings where management wants you to ignore all the bad stuff. 'cause if you wish the bad stuff to go away, it's really good
Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization - EBITDA.
So if the company doesn't pay any interest, doesn't pay tax, don't need to fix or maintaine buildings and the hardwares... then all the earnings belong to shareholders.
Quoting Buffett again... in the real world, you do pay interests, taxes... well, maybe not taxes...
So beware of businesses that touts these imaginary numbers in their presentation. It almost always indicate poor performance.
Take a look and see what portion of the ITDA are "one-offs". So if it doesn't owe any debt, the I doesn't matter; if it doesn't make any money, the T doesn't matter; if its assets are mainly intangibles, the D n A don't matter either.
But then if those don't matter... the company soon enough become no matter at all.
Just be mindful that tech companies often trade at high PE multiples (Price/Earnings) and many ignore the fact that the company is running a net loss in view of the long term goal. Examples include Amazon which didn't make a profit for 14 years as it engaged in its massive expansion plan.
Noted thanks
(emphasis mine)So earnings are always EBITDA and therefore not the same as net profit. Am i getting this right?
(emphasis mine)
I think you're getting stuck on terminology.
You're trying to pin the term 'earnings' down to an item on the income statement. But 'earnings' is just a term - there are various types of 'earnings'. 'Profits' or 'Income' could also be used as terms to mean the same thing.
So, you will see the term earnings (or profit or income) used to describe different income statement line items, and it needs a word before it to tell you what type of earnings (or profit) it is. Is it gross earnings? operating income? net operating income after tax? net income? net income but excluding extraordinaries? etc.
When you read about earnings, often it is (just as you expected) net earnings. But obviously sometimes (i.e. in the example you came across) they mean something else (in this case, apparently EBITDA).
Income = Earnings = Profits = Revenue (all synonyms of money inbound).
That makes sense. So if I get this right:
Income = Earnings = Profits = Revenue (all synonyms of money inbound).
And they can all be used this way:
Net income, Gross Income, Net Revenue, Gross earnings, Net earnings, Earnings before xyz, Gross profit, net profit, and so on ... what matter is the prefix used to qualify them.
Am I getting this right?
Why isn't that standard and enforced? Why are people who report allowed to say things like "income for this year was xyz" ... that doesn't tell us which type of income... is it mostly an atempt to mislead people who don't understand accounting terms?
Such wisdom.
Can you give me a pointer as to where to start on evaluating a "good business" with a couple of good businesse's out there?
I come across lots of claims about certain businesses being great but it all seems quite speculative gobledigook.
Most, just about all that I've read, AFR and stuff on how great a business is... they always quote the sales growth and the market potential of a business. That's just lazy writing.
So if a business is "young" and show massive growth in revenue - which is kind of what you'd expect from a new business seeing how any new revenue over a small base is massive.
But if you're an armchair fat-cat investor who's only interested in buying businesses that makes actual money, don't much care how the money is made, and ignore the future possibilities, not interested in the hype about getting in on the bottom - i.e. bare some losses now but will be rewarded big time later.
Basically, a business is dynamic, in a competitive environment, in an economy where new technologies, changing consumer taste etc. etc could ruin a dominant business in a matter of years; turn a nobody little schrimp into... a Seek?
In other words, you're looking for businesses with a (long) history of great performance; ideally in an industry where it is dominant, or the resources and patents in its control are so impressive that a new idiot at the helm, a few mistakes here and there... couldn't ruin it completely... or over a long enough time frame you and your armchair can pick it up and get out.
I'm trying to say that the future... we hope for the best... but we can't predict it. That's what the future is right?
Accepting that, what makes a business a good one?
Remember Buffett's and Munger's (and Graham's) advise that quality isn't enough. I mean, you can overpay into a quality business and eventually it will work out alright too... but ideally you'd want both quality at a sensible price.
Here we're going to look at quality alone.
It's pretty simple.
Look at the company's Retained Earnings (with, then without dividends) and its Contributed Equity.
CE is what shareholders put in. As an investor/owner of the business, you really do not want to put in anymore money to a business and yet still collect those coupons. And if you really need to contribute more... it ought to be incremental, rare, once in a blue moon sort of thing... and when you do cough up new cash, it ought to be because there's some incredible new opportunity the business must take on and they need some quick cash to seriously bring the business to new heights.
But in general, CE should remain flat or declining. Decline mean there have been share buyback, capital return.
Retained earnings must rise.
A profitable business pays its shareholders dividend, kept some back... and this is shown in its RE - in the balance sheet.
That's pretty much universal across all businesses. Established ones anyway.
Again, not saying crappy businesses won't grow up and take over the world. But you got to really know that business inside out to make any kind of judgment. Either way, that's really speculating rather than investing. Well, it's investing where you might not see your money again.
Now, in pictures.....
GREEN are retained earnings.
Dark Grey/black are CE.
Good quality business rising RE; Flat or decline CE.
Poor quality ones the reverse... always need new cash. And if you see new CE, you can bet they also increase their long term borrowing too.
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THE BAD
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First, thanks for the great visuals.
Where can I get my hands on businesses (and graphs) like those? Is there a reliable search tool you use to get businesses following those particularly good profiles?
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