Understanding the Income Statement — The Profit & Loss
What is an Income Statement?
An income statement provides a summary of a company's financial performance over a specific period. Also known as a Profit and Loss Statement (P&L), it offers a detailed overview of a company's revenues, expenses, and overall profitability.
Key Components
1. Revenue (Total Turnover)
Revenue represents the total income generated from sales of products and services.
2. Cost of Revenue
Expenses incurred in producing and delivering products and services. Ideally, the cost of revenue increases as the company sells more.
3. Gross Margin
Gross Margin = Revenue – Cost of Revenue
Represents the amount remaining after subtracting direct costs from total revenue.
Example: If total revenue is $126B and gross margin is $83B, the gross margin percentage is ~65% — meaning for every $100 of sales, $65 is retained after covering direct costs.
4. Operating Expenses
Costs incurred to run the business: salaries, marketing, administrative expenses. Unlike cost of revenue, operating expenses don't always increase with revenue.
5. Operating Income
Operating Income = Gross Margin – Operating Expenses
6. Other Income and Taxes
- Other Income — Income from non-core activities (investments, asset sales).
- Income Before Taxes — Total earnings before tax deductions.
- Provision for Income Taxes — The portion of earnings allocated to taxes.
7. Net Income (The Bottom Line)
Net Income = Operating Income + Other Income – Taxes
The ultimate measure of a company's profitability.
Summary Table
| Line Item | Description |
|---|---|
| Revenue | Total sales of products and services |
| Cost of Revenue | Direct costs of producing/delivering |
| Gross Margin | Revenue minus Cost of Revenue |
| Operating Expenses | Running costs (payroll, marketing) |
| Operating Income | Gross Margin minus Operating Expenses |
| Other Income / Taxes | Non-operating items and tax obligations |
| Net Income | Final profit after all deductions |