Summary

The income statement is a summary of a company’s profitability over a certain period of time.

  • Profitability is the difference between revenues and expenses generated by a company’s activities.

  • Revenues are recognized when an economic exchange occurs, and expenses associated with a product are matched during the same period as revenue generated from that product.

  • Special care must be taken to distinguish operating expenses (stemming from core activities) from nonoperating costs (arising from peripheral transactions) in arriving at a company’s net income.

  • Gross profit, EBITDA, EBIT, and net income are all important indicators of a company’s operating performance. While they are very useful measures of profitability, each must be used in and applied to the analysis of a company’s financial health with a full awareness of its limitations and potential for misrepresentation.

20. The Lemonade Stand
Exercise
Q1:On January 1, 2007, you decide to enter a lemonade stand business. In order to buy all of the required equipment and supplies to get started, you estimate that you will need $50, plus an extra $100 for cushion.
You open a business checking account, into ...

Get Crash Course in Accounting and Financial Statement Analysis, Second Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.