Pages
- Home
- New WordPress Blog
- What is Value Investing?
- Portfolio 2K15
- Research Reports
- Videos
- Books
- Definitions - Investing
- Accounting and Financial Terms
- Formulae
- Calculator
- "How To?" Artciles
- "What Is?" Articles
- Slides/ Presentations/ Pictures
- Questions and Answers
- Warren Buffett's Inspirational Quotes
- Poems
- Investing Jokes
- Games
- Audience Speak
- Tweets
- Forum
- News
- Accreditations
- Website
- Contact
Quick Links
- New WordPress Blog
- Net Block (Fixed Assets) Definition
- Total Outside Liabilities to Tangible Net Worth (TOL/ TNW) Formula
- How to Navigate Turbulent Stock Markets?
- Why Mutual Fund Returns Dip?
- Is the Stock Market a Place to Make a Fast Buck?
- How to Find the Fair Price of A Stock?
- How to Calculate the Intrinsic Value of Shares?
- Price to Book Value Ratio - Formula
- Debt Equity Ratio - Formula
- Total Outside Liabilities to Tangible Net Worth (TOL/ TNW) Formula
Showing posts with label PAT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PAT. Show all posts
Friday, October 7, 2016
Profit After Tax (PAT) Example Slide
Labels:
PAT,
Picture,
Profit After Tax,
slide
What is Profit After Tax (PAT)?
Meaning and Definition:
Profit After Tax (PAT) is the net profit
earned by the organization after meeting all expenses and charges, including
material costs, all operating expenses, depreciation, interest and income tax.
Formula:
=
|
Sales Revenues
|
−
|
All Expenses Including
Depreciation, Interest, Tax but Excluding Appropriations
|
|
OR
|
||||
PAT
|
=
|
PBT
|
−
|
Income Tax
|
Significance:
It is the last line in the profit and
loss statement and therefore earned the popular jargon-phrase, bottom-line – which has further expanded
into contemporary common English usage, “What is the bottom-line?” Which means,
“What does it boil down to?” or “What is final result?”.
PAT does not include post tax
appropriations or allocations like dividends or set asides towards reserves
because such allocations are not a charge against profits but mere
discretionary allocation of profits already earned.
Happy Piglet Loves PAT |
Example:
|
M/s.Old
& Conservative Ltd.
|
M/s.New
& Extravagent Ltd.
|
Sales
|
1500.00
|
1520.00
|
All
Costs & Expenses before Depreciation, Interest, Tax and Appropriations
|
800.00
|
810.00
|
Depreciation
|
30.00
|
100.00
|
Interest
|
0.10
|
70.00
|
Earnings
after Depreciation and Interes but
Before, Tax and Appropriations (EBTA or EBT)
|
669.90
|
540.00
|
Non-Operating
Income
|
300.00
|
150.00
|
Profit
Before Tax (PBT)
|
969.90
|
690.00
|
Conclusion:
Profit After Tax (PAT) is the bottom-line
of the profit and loss statement as well as the investor’s interest in a stock
and therefore is the most important and only metric that actually matters.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)