How to make a Earnings statement
9 January 2009 - 14:41

The Earnings statement, also known as Account of Results, or Been (or Account) of Gains and Losses, is a financial report that show the income and expenses that a company throughout its economic exercise has obtained.
Examples of income are the financial sales, dividends, income, etc.
Examples of expenses are the consumption of merchandizes, financial expenses of personnel, expenses, depreciations, taxes, etc.
The difference between the income and the expenses knows as benefit him (when the income are majors that the expenses) or like loss (when the expenses are majors that the income).
Unlike the Flow of Box, the Earnings statement shows to the income and expenses at the moment at which they take place, regardless of the moment in which the collections or payments are made cash, for example, registers a sale or a purchase at the moment that takes place, although this one is received or it is pleased months later.
The importance of the Earnings statement is that this one allows us to analyze the financial situation of the company, for example, when comparing different scenes where the production has increased or handicapped; or, in the case of a Earnings statement Projected (also known like Operative Budget), when showing to us the projections of the future income and debits that the company will obtain, allow us to know the future yield the business and, therefore, its viability.
We see next a simple example of how to make a Earnings statement Projected:
A manufacturing company account with the following data:
- projections of sales: January: 85000, February: 88000, March: 90000, April: 92000.
- projections of production cost: January: 47000, February: 51000, March: 50000, April: 52000.
- the expenses of administration and sales are 20% of the projections of sales.
- depreciation is of 10% of the production costs.
- projections of the interests by loans obtained: January: 900, February: 750, March: 90, April: 450.
- the tax is 20% of the utility available.
State of Gains and Losses Projected
| January | February | March | April | |
| Net sales | 85000 | 88000 | 90000 | 92000 |
| Production cost | 47000 | 51000 | 50000 | 52000 |
| GROSS UTILITY | 38000 | 37000 | 40000 | 40000 |
| Expenses adm. and of sales | 17000 | 1790 | 18000 | 18400 |
| Depreciation (10% C. production) | 4700 | 5100 | 5000 | 5200 |
| UTILITY OPERTIVA | 16300 | 14300 | 17000 | 16400 |
| Interests | 900 | 750 | 90 | 450 |
| UTILITY BEFORE TAXES | 15400 | 13550 | 16400 | 15950 |
| Tax to the rent (20%) | 3080 | 2710 | 3280 | 3190 |
| NET UTILITY | 12320 | 10840 | 13120 | 12760 |
Labels: Concepts, Accounting, Finances, Tools of business
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Related contents:
- How to make a Flow of Box
- The balance point
- Costs in an industrial company
- Costs in a marketing company
- The accounting of costs

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