What is an Income Statement? Profit & Loss Explained with Examples for Beginners
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Income Statement (Profit & Loss) Explained – How Companies Measure Performance

Income Statement (Profit & Loss) Explained onetrader

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📖 Chapter 3 (Part 5): Income Statement (Profit & Loss) Explained – How Companies Measure Performance

🔹 Introduction

Every investor wants to know one thing —
💰 “Is the company making money or losing it?”

The answer lies in the Income Statement, also called the Profit & Loss (P&L) Statement.

This report shows how much revenue a company earned, how much it spent, and what’s left as profit.
It’s like the company’s report card — showing how efficiently it performs.

Also Read: ROCE vs ROE – Which Is More Important for Investors? (2025 Guide)


🔹 What is an Income Statement?

An Income Statement summarizes a company’s revenues, expenses, and profits over a specific period (quarter or year).

Simple Formula:

Net Profit = Revenue – Expenses

If revenue > expenses → profit
If expenses > revenue → loss


🔹 Why It’s Important for Investors

  1. Shows whether a company is profitable or not.
  2. Reveals trends in sales and costs.
  3. Helps compare performance across quarters/years.
  4. Used to calculate key ratios (EPS, margins, etc.)

🔹 Structure of an Income Statement

SectionDescriptionExample
Revenue (Sales)Total income from goods/services₹100 crore
COGS (Cost of Goods Sold)Direct costs to produce goods₹60 crore
Gross ProfitRevenue – COGS₹40 crore
Operating ExpensesSalaries, rent, marketing₹20 crore
Operating Profit (EBIT)Profit from core business₹20 crore
Other Income / Interest / TaxNon-core earnings or costs₹5 crore total
Net ProfitFinal profit after all costs₹15 crore

🔹 Example: DMart Simplified

ItemAmount (₹ Cr)
Total Revenue42,000
Total Expenses39,000
Net Profit3,000

✅ That ₹3,000 crore is what shareholders actually earn — this number drives EPS and stock price growth.


🔹 Simple Analogy

Think of a small food stall 🍔

  • Revenue: Money from customers (₹1,000/day)
  • Expenses: Milk, bread, rent, salary (₹800/day)
  • Profit: ₹200/day

That’s your income statement in action — showing your business performance daily!


🔹 Key Ratios from Income Statement

1️⃣ Gross Margin = (Gross Profit ÷ Revenue) × 100
2️⃣ Operating Margin = (Operating Profit ÷ Revenue) × 100
3️⃣ Net Profit Margin = (Net Profit ÷ Revenue) × 100

Higher margins = more efficient company 💪


🔹 Red Flags to Watch

⚠️ Falling revenue → declining demand
⚠️ Rising expenses faster than sales → poor management
⚠️ Negative profit for several quarters → risky business


🔹 Q&A Section

Q1: How often is the income statement released?
A: Quarterly and annually (in company results).

Q2: Which is more important — revenue or profit?
A: Both. Revenue shows scale; profit shows efficiency.

Q3: Can a company show profit but still have no cash?
A: Yes — because profit includes non-cash items like depreciation.

Q4: Where to find the income statement?
A: On the company’s annual report, NSE, BSE, or Screener.in


🔹 Key Takeaways

  • Income statement = Company’s performance report
  • Shows how much money came in and went out
  • Focus on profit growth, not just sales growth
  • Compare year-over-year (YoY) to check consistency
  • A growing profit trend = strong management and business model

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