Показаны сообщения с ярлыком costs. Показать все сообщения
Показаны сообщения с ярлыком costs. Показать все сообщения

четверг, 21 ноября 2024 г.

Costs vs. expenses

 


Costs vs. expenses.
Same money out, different impact.

Here’s the thing:

Both involve financial outflows, but they’re recorded differently in financial statements and play very different roles in business strategy.

If you don’t understand the difference, you can’t position your financials—or your decisions—effectively.

Let’s break it down. ⬇️

A cost builds the future—it’s an investment in assets.
An expense keeps the lights on—it’s the cost of operations.

Confusing these two leads to distorted financials, misaligned strategies, and poor decision-making.

Let’s break it down:

1️⃣ Costs: Building Assets

Costs represent resources used to create or acquire long-term assets like equipment, materials, or infrastructure.

Financial Impact:

• Recorded as assets on the Balance Sheet.
• Moved to the Income Statement as COGS or depreciation when recognized.

Strategic Implications:

• High costs increase operating leverage, making profitability more sensitive to sales changes.

• Capitalizing costs spreads their impact over time, creating long-term value.

Key Question: Are your costs driving future revenue, or are they tying up resources without ROI?

2️⃣ Expenses: Running the Business

Expenses represent the resources consumed to maintain daily operations, like rent, salaries, and utilities.

Financial Impact:

• Recorded directly on the Income Statement as Operating Expenses.
• Fully deducted in the period incurred, reducing immediate profitability.

Strategic Implications:

• Operating expenses provide flexibility but hit profitability and cash flow directly.

• Mismanagement of expenses can harm margins and reduce EBITDA.

Key Question: Are your expenses directly supporting revenue growth, or are they just reducing the bottom line?

The Complexity: Capitalizing vs. Expensing

This is where things get tricky.

Knowing when to capitalize a cost (as an asset) or expense it immediately is critical. And it's largely (and loosely) driven by accounting principles.

Costs (CapEx): Depreciated over time, creating a tax shield and spreading their impact on earnings.

Expenses (OpEx): Deducted immediately, reducing taxable income in the short term but offering no long-term balance sheet benefits.

Examples:
↳ R&D: Should it be capitalized as a future asset or expensed?
↳ Prepaid Expenses: How do you align them with the revenues they support?
↳ Deferred Revenues: How do you recognize only when delivery is complete?

Key Takeaway:

Costs are investments for future growth.
Expenses keep daily operations running.

Are you managing them effectively to align with your business goals?


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вторник, 30 апреля 2024 г.

Margin is not Markup

 



▶️ Margin shows how much of a product's sales price or revenue you got to keep.

▶️ Markup shows how much over cost you've sold your product(s) for.

🎯 Let's dig deeper into each of these .

1// Margin (or Gross Profit Margin in this case) is the proportion of a product’s Sales Price that exceeds the Product Cost.

☑️ Margin = (Product Sales Price - Product Cost)/ Product Sales Price

☑️ Margin = Gross Profit per Product / Product Sales Price x 100

Note that Margin is calculated as a percentage.

Meanwhile, Gross Profit is calculated as an amount.

2// Markup is the proportion by which you increase the Product Cost to arrive at the Sales Price.

☑️ Markup = (Product Sales Price - Product Cost)/ Product Cost

☑️ Markup = Gross Profit per Product / Product Cost x 100

Markup can be calculated based on a product's variable cost or based on its total (absorption) cost.

☑️ Marking up the variable cost could result in under costing and underpricing the product, which in turn may increase revenues at the expense of reduced profitability and cash flows.

💎 Use Cost-Volume-Profit analysis to determine the number of units you will need to sell to break even.

☑️ Marking up the absorption cost could result in over costing and overpricing, which in turn could reduce revenues also at the expense of reduced profitability and cash flows.

💎Be careful with the fixed manufacturing depreciation expense which gets included in the full/absorption cost of a product.

🎯 To calculate your margin if you know your markup: ☑️ Margin = Markup /(1+Markup)

🎯 To calculate your markup if you know your margin: ☑️ Markup = Margin / (1-Margin)

🎯 How to use Margin and Markup:

☑️ Both Margin and Markup calculate the difference between price and cost.

☑️ Margin relates that difference to Price or Revenue.

☑️ Markup relates that difference to Cost.

☑️ If you know the Product Cost, use Markup to determine an appropriate selling Price.

☑️ If you know the Product Gross Profit, use it to determine the Gross Profit Margin and track profitability over time.


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