Retained Earnings on the Balance Sheet
When a company generates a profit, management has one of two choices:
They can either pay it out to shareholders as a cash dividend or
retain the earnings and reinvest them in the business. That reinvestment may be used to fund acquisitions, build new factories, increase inventory levels, establish larger cash reserves, reduce long-term debt, hire more employees, start a new division, research and develop new products, buy common stock in other businesses, purchase equipment to increase productivity, or a host of other potential uses.
When the executives decide that earnings should be retained, they have to account for them on the balance sheet under shareholder equity. This allows investors to see how much money has been put into the business over the years. Once you learn to read the income statement, you can use the retained earnings figure to make a decision on how wisely management is deploying and investing the shareholders' money. If you notice a company is plowing all of its earnings back into itself and isn't experiencing exceptionally high growth, you can be sure that the stockholders would be better served if the board of directors declared a dividend instead.
Ultimately, the goal for any successful management is to create $1 in market value for every $1 of retained earnings. Any business that insisted upon keeping the profit that belonged to you, the owner, without ever sending funds to you in the form of a dividend or increasing your own wealth through higher capital gains is not going to have much utility.
Investing is about putting out money today for more money in the future. No rational personal would continue to hold a stake in a corporation that never permitted any of the rewards to flow through to the stockholder.
Retained Earnings Examples from Real Companies
Let's look at an example of retained earnings on the balance sheet:
Microsoft has retained $18.9 billion in earning over the years. It has over 2.5 times that amount in stockholder equity ($47.29 billion), no debt, and earned over 12.57% on its equity the previous year. Obviously, the company is using the shareholder's money very effectively. With a market cap of $314 billion, the software giant has done an amazing job.
Lear Corporation is a company that creates automotive interiors and electrical components for everyone from General Motors to BWM. In 2001, the company had retained over $1 billion in earnings and had a negative tangible asset value of $1.67 billion dollars! It had a return on equity of 2.16%, which, at the time, was less than a passbook savings account. The company was astronomically priced at 79.01 times earnings and had a market cap of $2.67 billion. In other words: Shareholders reinvested a billion dollars of their money back into the company and what did they receive in return? They owed $1.67 billion.1 That is a bad investment.
The Lear example deserves a closer look. It is immediately apparent that shareholders would have been better off had the company paid out its earnings as dividends. Unfortunately, the economics of the company were so bad had the profits been paid out, the business probably would have gone bankrupt.
The earnings were reinvested at a sub-par rate of return. At the time, an investor would have earned more on the earnings by putting them in a CD or money market fund than by reinvesting them into the business.
2 videos|51 docs|19 tests
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1. What are retained earnings and why are they important in financial statements? |
2. How are retained earnings calculated and where are they reported on financial statements? |
3. What are the main factors that can impact the level of retained earnings? |
4. How can an analysis of retained earnings help in assessing a company's financial performance? |
5. How can a company utilize its retained earnings? |
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