Читать книгу Corporate Finance For Dummies - Michael Taillard - Страница 114

SINGLE-STEP INCOME STATEMENTS

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Many companies prefer to use single-step income statements, particularly for minor reports that aren’t annual or quarterly.

The big difference between the multiple-step income statement and the single-step income statement is that the single-step statement doesn’t separate costs and revenues by their source operations. Instead, it lists all income, breaking it down into net sales and other, and then lists all costs, with a total of the costs. Finally, it lists earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT), taxes, net income, and earnings per share (EPS). It’s a much shorter method of reporting earnings, but it isn’t nearly as informative as the multiple-step statement.

Corporate income statements work a lot like your personal finances: You start with the amount of money you make and then subtract all your costs to find out how much you have left to put in the bank, buy a new vacation home, or join a professional Ping-Pong team.

The main difference is that corporate income statements probably include more information overall than your personal income statement. In fact, a company’s income statement breaks down how much money it’s making versus how much it’s spending into six main categories. Together, these six categories detail the company’s costs and revenues, separating them by their source operations. I cover each of these categories in the following sections.

Corporate Finance For Dummies

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