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Principles of Finance: Unit 2, Balance Sheet 14 Views
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Description:
Our little lemonade stand got started with a $5,000 loan. What to do now? Pay off the loan or franchise with the profits? What a "Sophie's Choice" we have on our hands here.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop. balance sheet. okay so we're gonna add on
- 00:08
a bit of complexity to our proverbial lemonade stand image here. first we're [man sits in front of white board]
- 00:14
gonna think about our cash. how was the company started? well it got a loan five
- 00:19
grand from Grandma.com. she didn't want to charge us interest but our parents
- 00:25
made her. their real life matters kind of parents. so she charged us ten percent
Full Transcript
- 00:30
interest or five hundred bucks a year. for as long as we were renting that five
- 00:35
grand. well at the end of our first year we have a financial decision to make. do
- 00:39
we want to pay off the loan fully? or spend our six grand in after-tax cash
- 00:44
profits on building a second lemonade stand? [equation]
- 00:47
well our gut will tell us which way is most profitable risk-adjusted and that's
- 00:52
what we'll do. well let's go back and restate our income statement to include
- 00:55
the interest we owe on the five grand we borrowed. and there we go so a couple of
- 01:01
interesting things to notice here. we added five hundred bucks in expenses via
- 01:06
actually accounting for our loan to start the company. well before we had
- 01:10
added that in we had six grand in net profits so it would be rational to think
- 01:15
that we've just added five hundred bucks in expenses and now our new net profits
- 01:20
number should be fifty five hundred but it's not. it's better than that. why ? taxes.
- 01:26
yeah that 500 bucks came before the government took its 25% bite out of us.
- 01:32
well essentially the government paid for a quarter of our interest expense. hmm
- 01:37
how's that work? and you can imagine that in very high tax situations the [cost spreadsheet shown]
- 01:41
incentive to borrow more money is much higher because the government
- 01:45
essentially covers a lot of those expenses in the form of your being able
- 01:48
to deduct the interest expense on the money the money you borrow against the
- 01:53
taxes you'd be paying on your profits. all right another interesting thing to
- 01:57
note here was that we generated five thousand six hundred twenty-five dollars
- 02:01
in cash during the year. our interest expense was five hundred dollars. we
- 02:06
generated way more cash than we had in interest expense meaning that our
- 02:11
bankruptcy risk here is very low. which is good. we wonder to ourselves so
- 02:16
how much money could I borrow if we wanted to go big with lemonade stands
- 02:20
R US. lemonade stand on every corner in the country .okay and so doing a little [boy celebrates in front of lemonade stand]
- 02:26
bit amusing on the math here like if our interest rate was 10 percent we're
- 02:30
generating with one stand over five grand in cash well couldn't we borrow
- 02:36
ten times that number of fifty grand? if we did a 50 grand borrow that'd be about
- 02:41
five thousand dollars in interest we'd still have more profits than interest.
- 02:45
how much would it cost to launch a new additional stand would that stand
- 02:49
cannibalize revenues from our first stand. mmm could we buy supplies cheaper
- 02:55
if we had more scale or size? how many licks does it really take to get the
- 03:00
center of line? oh never mind. okay so we wonder about
- 03:02
the ratios here that go behind debt. largely revolving around how much debt
- 03:07
could we borrow if we wanted to max out. well we know that banks focus on an
- 03:11
arcane term called EBITDA when they loan money. side note if we ever get a
- 03:17
large dog at shmoop we're gonna name him gonna EBITDA. well what is EBITDA anyway?
- 03:22
well it stands for earnings before interest taxes depreciation and
- 03:27
amortization and in our case here we'd calculate our EBITDA is our earnings of
- 03:32
five thousand six hundred twenty-five dollars but then we'd add back interest
- 03:35
of five hundred bucks and taxes of 1875. we don't have any assets. [EBITDA explained]
- 03:41
we're depreciating or amortized so that totals 8 grand and EBITDA. and we use
- 03:46
EBITDA to get rid of non apples-to-apples things like taxes and
- 03:51
interest which can change a lot over time with interest rates moving in taxes
- 03:54
being different different states different countries and so on. we do this
- 03:57
so that we have a clearer picture of the basic operating health of the company.
- 04:02
and it's often quoted as a multiple by banks when they think about appropriate
- 04:06
levels for loaning money in the form of a debt to EBITDA ratio. and a ratio of four
- 04:12
is often about as high as low risk seeking bank will ever want to. go four
- 04:17
times debt to EBITDA and that would mean that without paying enormous
- 04:21
interest costs lemonade stands our us could get a loan of about 32 grand give [man explains in front of a lemonade stand]
- 04:26
or take. that's four times that $8,000 they
- 04:29
or EBITDA. so for a moment let's think about maxing out our loans. if we
- 04:32
found a bank stupid enough or visionary enough to trust us with a loan for 32
- 04:38
grand and they charged us 10% interest amazingly well we can still make the
- 04:43
interest payment. the bigger question is could we then use the 32 grand to open
- 04:48
up say six more lemonade stands at a cost of five grand each ? and still have
- 04:53
two grand left over for whatever. all right well at first blush our
- 04:58
projections say yes . and if each of those six stands could themselves generate
- 05:03
something like five grand a profit at the end of their first year like the
- 05:06
first one did well then wow we could pay back all of the loans in just one year. [equation]
- 05:11
and hmm that feels a lot like how Starbucks got started.
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