🔶It is a statement of Company's Revenue, Cost & Profitability
🔶Simply, it's a snapshot of what Company earns and how it spends money
🔶It is prepared for the specific period
🔶Also known as Income Statement
Check out the image👇
[B] What are the Components of BS?
🔶Income: How much the company earns
🔶Expenses: How much the company spends
🔶Profit/Loss: Net earning of the Company
Mathematically,
Income - Expenses = Profit/Loss
Let's understand in detail
Contd.
Check out below image 👇
Shown in the image is the simplified form of P&L A/c
It flows from Top to Bottom.
That's why Net profit is known as the Bottom line of the Company.
P&L also discloses EPS i.e. Earnings per share (Calculated as Net Profit/Total No. of Shares)
[B.1] - Income
Income includes:
🔶Revenue from Operations i.e., Sales from Core business [Can be bifurcated into Sale of Products and Sale of Services]
🔶Other Income i.e., Income from non-operating activities such as dividend, Interest, Forex Gain/loss, etc.
Check image 👇
[B.2] - Expenses
Expenses are the costs that a business incurs to run the business
It includes:
🔶Cost of Material Used
🔶Salary to employees
🔶Interest
🔶Depreciation
🔶Taxes
🔶Advertisement Expense
🔶Commission
🔶Repairing Cost
🔶Other expenses
Check image below👇
[C] How it is prepared?
🔶Based on accrual accounting
🔶Prepared for a specific period
🔶With comparative figures
🔶Prepared Quarterly for listed companies
[D] How it is Used?
🔶To evaluate growth in Business
🔶To assess whether Co. made money or lost during the period
🔶Helps in gaining insights into financial Position of Co.
🔶Used for Calculating several ratios
🔶Further, it's used by several stakeholders for different purposes
[E] Limitations of P&L A/C
P&L doesn't capture the entire picture always
E.g. it doesn't consider
🔶Loss of Valuable Employees
🔶Cash Realization of Profits
🔶Window dressing could be possible through several means
Let's understand Window dressing in detail 👇
Contd.
[F] Window Dressing
Simply, it is a superficial or misleading presentation of F St. to create favourable impression
It includes methods such as:
🔶Revaluation of assets
🔶Heavy discount or commission to boost sales
🔶Changing the method of depreciation
🔶Sale and leaseback txn.
[1] What is P&L A/c
[2] Components of P&L A/c
[3] What is Income
[4] What is Expense
[5] How P&L A/c is prepared
[6] How P&L A/c is used
[7] Limitations of P&L A/c
[8] What is Window dressing
A hammer is a bullish trend reversal single candlestick that forms after a correction. It indicates a change in trend, i.e. from downtrend📉 to uptrend📈.
The candlestick has a long lower wick with a short body and little to no upper wick
3/n Chart view - highlighted candle
🔸A long wick indicates a weak trading session where sellers pushed prices down during the session.
🔸However, the green candle finish shows that buyers entered to end the session strongly.
Cola war is back. Reliance Consumer is reviving Campa Cola, and launching it at a discounted price to leaders Coca Cola & Pepsi.
Can Campa Cola pose a real threat to Varun Beverages? We analyze in this thread:
1/n
2/ Chances are if you are under 30, you would have never heard of Campa Cola till a week back. Well, Campa Cola was a market leader and a rage through the 80s and early 90s.
Campa was created by Pure Drinks Group in the 1970s - they were pioneers of Soft drink industry in India.
3/ There were very few players in 1980s, and Campa dominated with its brand slogan "The Great Indian Taste". They had bottling plants in Mumbai, Delhi and Haryana.
Come 1990s, popularity of Campa declined after entry of foreign brands Coke and Pepsi and it gradually faded away.
2/ Candlestick charts is one of the oldest trading techniques. They're referred as "Japanese candles" because the Japenese would use them to analyse the price of rice contracts.
A rice trader named Homma from Sakata deserves much of the credit for candlestick development.
3/
Over many years of trading, it's likely that his original concepts were altered and improved, eventually leading to the candlestick charting system that we use today.
But many of the guiding principles remained the same throughout the years 👇
With $180B in deposits, SVB was as large as HDFC Bank which has deposits of ~₹15L cr. However, in reality, it's scale is similar to IndusInd Bank (₹3.3L cr).
How?🤔
Let's explain Purchasing Power Parity💡- the great equalizer! 👇 1/n #LearnwithICICIDirect
PPP compares a country's relative cost of goods/ services with its inflation to reflect the relative purchasing power of its currency.
It is basically the rate at which currency of one country is exchanged for another to buy the SAME amount of goods & services.
3/ History of PPP
PPP came into existence after WW I.
Earlier, most countries relied on Gold standard - exch. rate was based on how much gold a country's currency was worth.
Countries abandoned GS to pay for the war & printed all the money they needed, which led to inflation.