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Accounting: Relative Margins: Good, Bad, and Ugly 2 Views
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Transcript
- 00:00
Accounting Allah shmoop relative margins good bad and or ugly
- 00:08
A big part of a company's financial report card will
- 00:10
come from an assessment of how they're doing relative to
- 00:13
competitors in two key categories And these are the primary
- 00:17
drivers of share price overtime margins and revenue growth Like
Full Transcript
- 00:22
you can imagine a scenario where your the new CEO
- 00:25
brought into quote Fix unquote a newspaper company The company
- 00:30
on Lee prints on paper and doesn't have a website
- 00:34
You could very quickly fire all the non union jobs
- 00:37
and six months later fire all the union workers and
- 00:41
for one year your margins would skyrocket from eight percent
- 00:45
to twenty three percent But your revenue with likely get
- 00:49
cut in half or worse So just looking at profit
- 00:52
margins alone in a vacuum means nothing like in this
- 00:55
case you should have been investing in a Web site
- 00:57
in an Internet presence and relevance in the local community
- 01:00
and all that stuff and not so worried about cost
- 01:02
cutting There has to be revenue growth with a company
- 01:05
or it just doesn't win much love or a multiple
- 01:08
on Wall Street Right So if you're in the sunglasses
- 01:11
business Well they're just a handful of large scale competitors
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The one growing revenues at thirty percent with twenty five
- 01:17
percent operating margins is going to trade it a big
- 01:20
multiple premium compared with one growing revenues that only ten
- 01:23
percent with the fifteen percent margins right like way the
- 01:27
last prophet on less revenues But for the moment the
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focus here is on margin profit margin Here inventory is
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an expense I eat the cost structure of the ingredients
- 01:38
that go into a product or service like plastics and
- 01:41
dark glass lenses and two hinges right That's the stuff
- 01:45
that comprises inventory that lets the sunglass company make it
- 01:49
sunglasses Well for cross business perspective let's tack on the
- 01:53
lemonade stand business and the manner in which it manages
- 01:56
its inventory against the very different structure of a sun
- 02:00
glasses The business we're including only the cops and the
- 02:02
liquid as costs that go against gross margin that is
- 02:05
we have revenues and we have ah very few basic
- 02:08
expenses in the form of cups water and sugar and
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well that's about it Subtracting those expenses from revenues gives
- 02:13
us a very high gross margin product in our lemonade
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at something like eighty five percent What that means is
- 02:19
that we're choosing to ignore all the other costs that
- 02:22
go into actually physically serving a customer A cup of
- 02:26
lemonade Obviously the company needs labored a portal lemonade to
- 02:29
collect the cash to clean up spills and do other
- 02:32
you know exciting tasks like that They're also basic fixed
- 02:36
costs like renting the physical place where the lemonade is
- 02:39
served paying for the city permits and all other kinds
- 02:41
of expenses that go into a world class Will lemonade
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stand if there is such a thing But for the
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purposes of this intellectual exercise we're only assuming the basics
- 02:49
a cup and liquid in it as our only expense
- 02:52
against revenue We've collected of a buck a cup Okay
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So what are the collective extra elements we need in
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order to actually serve that cup of lemonade Will How
- 03:01
do people get served ignoring labor How do they pay
- 03:04
Ignoring Visa and MasterCard Robot C How do they use
- 03:08
robots Maybe labor should go up there in the gross
- 03:11
margin line as well And maybe not Well what do
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you think It's up to you anyway in the case
- 03:15
of the lemonade business If the cost of cups double
- 03:18
than the cost of sugar and lemons went up fifty
- 03:20
percent that is instead of ten cents a cup It
- 03:22
cost twenty and instead of a nickel it was seven
- 03:24
and a half cents for the sugar and lemons Well
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we'd still have a pretty high margin business Gross unit
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margins would be seventy two and a half cents a
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cup The key idea here is that inventory management and
- 03:34
price optimization for those kinds of inputs doesn't matter all
- 03:38
that much When you have an extremely profitable company you
- 03:41
want to optimize revenues Not so much worried about cutting
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costs right If a can of Coke sells for a
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buck and sugar prices double now that can produce is
- 03:50
something like seventy cents of profits instead of eighty or
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something like that In very high margin business is you
- 03:55
don't go bankrupt If input costs go up your just
- 03:59
less wildly profitable poor you literally But there's another side
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to this coin like that Think about the generally very
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low margin airline industry where fuel is a huge part
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of expenses and its pricing is extremely volatile Well in
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times of falling fuel prices assuming they aren't reflective of
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a failing economy and that air travel in economic times
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air highly correlated well then airlines arm or profitable than
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otherwise When their cost of doing business i e The
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fuel is cheap Things can whips off fast though one
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bomb goes off in the Middle East and fuel prices
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double overnight and airlines hemorrhage on more than just blue
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ice So inventory management is hugely imp important there So
- 04:40
is capital management in the notion of how much margin
- 04:43
life insurance companies are willing to pay for a given
- 04:45
amount of pretty detection Okay what does that mean Margin
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life insurance What is this Well answer It's an investment
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in hedges That company's namely airlines make to protect a
- 04:56
minimum level of profit margin for their company Usually only
- 04:59
companies and extremely volatile supply line industries like the airline
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industry by these edges because if they don't in very
- 05:06
bad whipsaw e supply times the company could go fully
- 05:10
bankrupt The structure itself of these hedges is really not
- 05:13
that different than basically term life insurance or a healthy
- 05:17
twenty five year old pays fifty bucks a month for
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a million dollar life insurance policy such that if he
- 05:21
dies and his wife wasn't the one who killed him
- 05:23
his wife and kid and a half get a big
- 05:25
fat million dollar check and will hopefully miss him if
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he doesn't die that month Well then the fifty dollars
- 05:31
was given gratis to the kindly loving people had Geico
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So the big question What is it worth to airlines
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to guarantee that they'll never have to pay Mohr than
- 05:40
say the equivalent of sixty bucks a barrel for oil
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or fuel reserves that they keep essentially quote in inventory
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unquote Think about a scenario where one airline has not
- 05:50
hedged its beds making a huge bet that peace will
- 05:53
continue to rain throughout the land Then a bomb hits
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and the absolute minimum in fuel cost airlines can spend
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to break even would charge an average SFO JFK a
- 06:03
ticket to be six hundred twelve dollars Well that prices
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for the airlines that hedged their bets The one airline
- 06:10
that didn't hedge Well it now has to pay double
- 06:13
the price of fuel Post bomb era prices Yeah What
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about that airlines Well they're marginal cost just for fuel
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is over a thousand dollars over a grand for that
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trip A customer So nobody books They're expensive flights because
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they have to charge a lot more or they're losing
- 06:30
money meaning they'd rather just not fly And basically this
- 06:33
is how you go bankrupt quickly in the airline industry
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So what does all this mean to the Quays I
- 06:38
investing community and the people who work at Thes Cos
- 06:41
Well at the end of the day or month or
- 06:42
quarter or year the goal of any company is just
- 06:44
produced profits for shareholders Companies come in many flavors of
- 06:48
profit High margin high profit companies like Google have their
- 06:51
own distinctive competitive commercial elements That is when on ly
- 06:55
small amounts of capital are required to build a website
- 06:57
which can produce very high margins Well they're typically exists
- 07:01
Ah highly rivalrous marketplace of lots and lots and lots
- 07:04
of competitors And there used to be that dynamic Yeah
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that's how things were in the very early high margin
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era of Google's existence when there were something like thirty
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search engine companies all vying to provide Internet search services
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for revenues of some fifty eight cents a click on
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costs of less than a penny Other industries are naturally
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low margin ones like that of the airline and automobile
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manuals fracturing ones where mature marketplaces and deep integration with
- 07:31
government regulation and unions has turned those industries largely into
- 07:35
job factories for voters union workers at the expense of
- 07:40
profit margins There's no particular rule for what the profit
- 07:43
margin of a given company or in the industry should
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be Other than that while generally speaking higher margins are
- 07:49
good and lower margins are bad And yeah that's on
- 07:52
page two forty three of Animal Farm Go look it 00:07:55.247 --> [endTime] up shmoop
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