You can type in any company and it will display the financials.
Let's use Aveng of course
Red is bad. Black is good.
An Income Statement shows you if a company made profits or losses.
It contains all the income and all the expenses of the company
You start at the top with Revenue. This is the sales the company made. Think of it as the heart of any business. We all start a business to make sales.
You want this number to increase year on year, right???
Let's not worry about inflation now. This number must grow annually
Next line is Gross Profit. This is the profit you make from selling your product.
If you are selling bread, you deduct the ingredients like flour, salt and yeast.
Here you don't deduct the rent and salaries and stuff yet, We are just checking if your product is profitable.
Next line is net profit. This is now after all the expenses like salaries, rent, marketing etc
You see all those numbers at the bottom....Those are fancy stuff us accountants do because the accounting rules force us to. It means very little and it has no cash flow impact, so don't wreck your brain with it
When you look at Revenue, Gross profit and Net Profit, you must do these 3 things:
Compare it year on year
Compare it to the industry
Compare it to competitors
Often people say “I Quit” when in fact they have been “Fired”
What is Constructive Dismissal?
Constructive dismissal is where an employee terminates the contract of employment with or without notice because the employer made continued employment intolerable for the employee
🧵
Five things must be in place:
1/ The employment circumstances were so intolerable that the employee could truly not continue to stay on.
2/ The unbearable circumstances were the cause of the resignation of the employee.
3/ There was no reasonable alternative at the time, but for the employee to resign to escape the circumstances.
4/ The unbearable situation must have been caused by the employer.
5/ The employer must have been in control of the unbearable circumstances.
Have you ever met with a financial adviser and felt completely out of place? You are not alone.
Here are 5 questions you have to ask before you sign on any dotted lines...
1/5
How do you get paid? Understanding how an adviser gets paid is key to understanding a lot about how the relationship might unfold. Make sure their incentives are aligned with yours & that they won’t be taking action just to earn a commission. I like fee-based advisers✔️
2/5
What are your credentials? Understanding the adviser’s educational background & professional credentials is also important. The financial world is complex & you’ll need an adviser who has shown they’re competent at handling it. Look for designations like CFA or CFP
I know people hate their 9-5 jobs, but I'm eternally grateful for these 8 lessons.
No degree taught me one of these
1/ Leverage your network
We do not work in silos. Where I lack, someone else excels. Work together for the greater good. There are more collaborators than hoarders. We made magic and shared the shine
2/ Report Writing
If you can't tell your story in ten slides or less, you don't understand the topic or solution well enough.
Mr Geoffrey Qhena...Google him. He stretched my writing abilities to the point where I wanted to cry. I needed 50 slides😂😂😂
I know many of you are scared to invest in the US markets. That's okay. It is very overwhelming.
The JSE has 462 listed companies
The US has 16 366 listed companies
Let me try to make it a little easier with a short 🧵
One huge difference between the JSE and the NYSE/NASDAQ is the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Who da heck is the SEC?
The SEC is a U.S. government oversight agency responsible for regulating the securities markets and protecting investors.
The SEC was established by the passage of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, largely in response to the stock market crash of 1929 that led to the Great Depression.
The SEC can itself bring civil actions against lawbreakers
Crypto freaks (me included) like to speak in foreign. Newbies, here are some of the terms. Book mark this one okay 📚
"Stacking sats"
The smallest unit of a Bitcoin is called a Satoshi (sats). Think of Rands (the whole coin) and Cents (sats). You will often hear the crypto community say they are "stacking sats". That means that they are accumulating pieces of cryptocurrencies.
HODL
This is not a misspelling; it is slang. It means "Hold On for Dear Life". The idea behind HODL is that Bitcoin’s price will continue to rise, regardless of huge dips.