In order to make a mean­ing­ful judgement about a company, you depend on key figures that enable you to carry out a (also in­ter­na­tion­al) com­par­i­son. An economic indicator capable of this is EBIT. But before you work with this indicator, you should un­der­stand exactly what it reveals, and how to calculate it.

What is EBIT? De­f­i­n­i­tion and ex­pla­na­tion

De­f­i­n­i­tion: EBIT

The acronym EBIT stands for "earnings before interest and taxes" and describes the profit of a company without expenses and income from interest and taxes.

The EBIT formula is often used in annual reports in English-speaking countries, and in the USA it is used alongside US GAAP (United States Generally Accepted Ac­count­ing Prin­ci­ples). This key figure is used to evaluate the result of operating ac­tiv­i­ties, without including revenues and expenses from taxes and interest. In other words, net income for the year is adjusted for taxes and interest. This value therefore does not cor­re­spond to the actual net result achieved at the end and which increases or decreases the company's assets, but only to an – albeit not unim­por­tant – pre­lim­i­nary result.

However, the exact in­ter­pre­ta­tion of the term EBIT is neither in­ter­na­tion­al­ly uniform nor clearly defined. In the USA, for example, the value means exactly what the acronym says to a large extent, namely earnings before interest and taxes, but interest income is often added to this. However, the items that are included differ from case to case, so this requires further ex­pla­na­tion.

Fact

Since the EBIT ratio is not stan­dard­ized, there is no con­sis­tent method for cal­cu­lat­ing it. Different en­ter­pris­es not only often use different de­f­i­n­i­tions of value, but also do not always include the same items, meaning that the results are only com­pa­ra­ble to a limited extent.

As long as you are aware of these lim­i­ta­tions, however, you can use EBIT to compare companies – not least across national borders. Since taxes vary from country to country, the ratio is a useful indicator for comparing business per­for­mance. Es­pe­cial­ly since interest income and expenses usually have nothing to do with the actual business ac­tiv­i­ties of an in­dus­tri­al company, for example, and therefore con­tribute little to the eval­u­a­tion of the operating result.

Fact

In addition to EBIT, there are two other similar key figures: the EBITA (earnings before interest, taxes and amor­ti­za­tion) and the EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, de­pre­ci­a­tion and amor­ti­za­tion).

Cal­cu­lat­ing EBIT – how it works

The EBIT cal­cu­la­tion differs from what you’ll be used to from the income statement. However, it can form the basis for the cal­cu­la­tion, since the key figure also appears in the income statement as an in­ter­me­di­ate step. Therefore, EBIT can be cal­cu­lat­ed either according to the total cost method or according to the cost-of-sales method. Both methods deliver EBIT based on sales revenue.

According to the total cost method:

  Sales revenue
+/- Inventory changes
+ Cap­i­tal­ized assets
+ other operating income
- other operating expenses
- Material costs
- Personnel costs
= EBITDA
- De­pre­ci­a­tion of property, plant, and equipment
= EBIT

According to the cost-of-sales method:

  Sales revenue
- Man­u­fac­tur­ing costs
= Gross profit
- Dis­tri­b­u­tion costs
- General ad­min­is­tra­tive costs
+ other operating income
- other operating expenses
= EBIT
Note

The ratio between sales and EBIT is called the EBIT margin. This value indicates the per­cent­age share of EBIT in sales.

Another method of cal­cu­lat­ing EBIT is based on net profit (or net loss). From this amount, you can calculate back because it already contains taxes and interest. This variant is – as you can quickly see – much simpler. In addition, you have to calculate the annual net profit for your balance sheet.

  Annual net profit
+/- Income taxes
+/- Ex­tra­or­di­nary income
+/- Interest costs
= EBIT

With this procedure, you must therefore deduct the interest and taxes that you already paid or received.

Example of the EBIT cal­cu­la­tion

In our example, there are two different companies from different countries and with different financial sit­u­a­tions. For the sake of sim­plic­i­ty, they both calculate their EBIT using the same procedure and can therefore be compared. While company A made a net profit of one million dollars for the year, company B made 1.1 million dollars. Company A lives in a state with a high tax rate and therefore has to pay $200,000 in income tax. To finance this, the company took out a loan of $500,000 and has to pay 5% interest on it, i.e. $25,000 per year.

The state in which company B is located charges only $120,000 in income taxes. In addition, this company is financed by a loan of $200,000 at the same interest rate and holds $100,000 in another company that earns it $5,000 in interest. This results in interest costs of $5,000.

Company A

  $1,000,000 Annual net profit
+ $200,000 Income taxes
+/- $0 Ex­tra­or­di­nary income
+ $25,000 Interest cost
= $1,225,000 EBIT

Company B

  $1,100,000 Annual net profit
+ $120,000 Income taxes
+/- $0 Ex­tra­or­di­nary income
+ $5,000 Interest cost
= $1,225,000 EBIT

Although Company B was therefore able to record a higher net profit for the year, the EBIT for the two companies is exactly the same. Only the different taxes and different financing arrange­ments result in different annual net profits. In terms of EBIT, both companies were equally suc­cess­ful.

Reviewer

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