Operating Income Before Depreciation And Amortization - OIBDA

  

Categories: Accounting, Metrics

See: EBITDA. See: Cash Flow.

This one's just about how much cash the operations of your business produces.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are Margins?212 Views

00:03

Finance a la shmoop what are margins well these are Marge

00:09

Inns..but they have nothing to do with what we're talking about here the term [Marge Inn hotels]

00:14

margin refers to various definitions of profit but a margin isn't a number it's

00:20

a fraction indicating what it costs a seller to sell something your profit [Man selling whoopie cushions]

00:26

after selling a $2.00 whoopee cushion that costs you 50 cents to make is a

00:31

buck 50 so your profit margin was 75 percent that's a buck 50 over 2 bucks

00:39

got it all right another like if a store sells [Little girl laying on her bed]

00:42

a Betsey cries herself to sleep doll for a dollar and that doll cost the

00:47

store 60 cents you know to buy the thing from the factory in China then it's

00:52

gross profit margin on the doll is 40% and you'd say that the product had gross

00:57

profit of 40 cents on that unit but these figures don't include the cost of [Man picking up a doll for his daughter]

01:03

hiring the employees to sell the dolls, nor the rent or the insurance on the

01:06

building nor the electric bill to run the lights nor the security guard who

01:09

stands outside and falls asleep against the building on a nightly basis so on [security guard falling asleep]

01:14

your typical income statement you've got revenues got expenses of the actual doll

01:19

then gross profit ie gross margin their see, then there's operating profit ie

01:25

and operating margin and then there's net profit the bottom line got it

01:30

after taxes all right well say a starbucks sells [man walking into a starbucks store]

01:32

10,000 cups of brain blaster bolivian coffees for seven bucks each it produces

01:38

70 grand of revenue in a month the coffee itself plus the barista minimum

01:42

wages electricity and other basics cost them 45 grand in that same month well

01:47

their gross profit is 25 grand and their gross margin is 25 over 70 or about 36 [gross profit and gross margin of starbucks store]

01:54

percent they then have franchise fees and advertising and legal costs and

01:58

insurance for the hot splls that burn people in their stores and that cost [man spilling coffee on his lap while driving]

02:02

them another 10 grand a month after that 10 grand they have 15 grand in operating

02:07

profits and their operating margin is 15 over 70 or about 21 percent

02:13

then they pay taxes on that 15 grand of segment of five grand so they have net

02:18

profits of ten thousand bucks or net margin of ten over seventy which is err

02:23

14% ish - all right why do we call these things margins well it's actually a good

02:28

way to remember what they are margins are so named because back in the day of [person writing on a piece of paper]

02:33

paper and pen people used to write all their income costs and expenses on a

02:38

line and then jot down their profit margin in the where was it oh yeah the

02:43

margin yeah we like the Simpsons explanation better will make you feel [Man approaches the desk of the Marge Inn hotel]

02:48

like you're home sweet homey

Up Next

Finance: What are operating expenses?
2 Views

A company has numerous operating expenses, but the primary ones have to do with payroll, sales and marketing, taxes and fees, office supplies, some...

Finance: What are operating profits, net profits and gross profits?
62 Views

What are operating profits, net profits and gross profits? Profits for a company can be calculated several different ways depending on what metric...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)