5.3 Income statements Flashcards

1
Q

What is profit?

A

a reward to business owners for the risk they take in investing their capital into the business

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2
Q

What are profits used to?

A

Measure success of a business
Measure performance of managers
Decide whether or not to continue making or selling a product
Finance purchase of non-current assets, expand business etc.
Attract investors who will provide additional funds for business

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3
Q

Gross profit?

A

Revenue - cost of sales

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4
Q

Profit?

A

Revenue - total sales

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5
Q

Retained profit?

A

Profit after expenses, taxes and dividends have been paid. Profit that is ploughed back into the business

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6
Q

Revenue

A

selling price * quantity sold

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7
Q

What are the differences between profit and cash?

A

Money invested in businesses increases cash but not profit
Capital expenditure decreases cash but does not decrease profit

Cash is important for the business at all times
Profit is more important for the long-term success of the business

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8
Q

What is an ‘income statement’?

A

Financial record of the business’s profits, costs and revenue over a given period of time

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9
Q

Shareholders/owners

A

Profit after tax belongs to the owner/shareholders

→ see how much they earned for their investment in business

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10
Q

Employees

A

High profit increases job security
Employees might expect to receive a good pay rise if a business is making good levels of profit
Some businesses have profit-sharing schemes, so high profits means high shares of profits for employees

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11
Q

Lenders

A

hey want to be sure that profit is enough to pay interest on loans
Is business earning enough profit to be able to repay loans when due?

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12
Q

Government

A

Higher the profit, the more tax the government will receive

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13
Q

Suppliers

A

A firm that is profitable will continue to purchase raw materials and other supplies, which helps supplier earn profit

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14
Q

Managers

A

They can compare profit from one year to next or with competitor’s profits to measure performance of business
Retained profit is an important source of finance for businesses

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15
Q

Shareholders

A

Usually higher the profit higher the dividend payment

Market value of shares will often rise or fall depending on high or low profits earned

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16
Q

What are ‘shareholder’s funds’?

A

Funds/money invested into the business by the owners

17
Q

What is a ‘balance sheet’?

A

an accounting statement that records owner’s equity, assets and liabilities of a business at a particular date

18
Q

What are ‘assets’?

A

resources owned by the business

19
Q

What are ‘liabilities’?

A

debts and payments that will have to be paid in the future

20
Q

What are ‘current assets’?

A

resources that a business expects to turn to cash before the date of the next balance sheet

21
Q

What are ‘non-current assets’?

A

resources that a business does not expect to turn into cash within a year

22
Q

What are ‘current liabilities’?

A

debts and payments a business expects to pay before the date of the next balance sheet

23
Q

What are ‘non-current liabilities’?

A

debts and payments business expects to pay after more than a year

24
Q

What is ‘owner’s equity’?

A

money a business owes to its investors which includes capital and retained profit