Guys I'm a commercial banking credit professional with over 30 years of lending experience spanning the big three major banks. I decided to watch this video and was prepare to be underwhelmed, BUT, dammit you actually nailed it. You did a solid job explaining the basic concepts and then built up from that foundation. The side by side comparisons of each method were helpful for those watching to follow and better understand how these measure tell the analyst different stories. Bravo well done!
WOW! This explanation was so clear and concise. Thank you so much for working on these videos. They are making important economic concepts accessible to such a wide audience that is eager for this knowledge.
Hey Brian, thanks a lot for the video! I work in banking and this is truly helpful. A question: why are we only looking at capital expenditures to subtract from Cash from Operations? How I used to look at it, I was taking into account the net flows from investing and servicing of debt in financing activities. In other words, looking at the Net change in cash and cash equivalents.
Very clear thank you. I just have a question regarding the EBITDA calculation : Since we have a + 1,424 million $ interest income, shouldn't we subtract this amount instead of adding it back ? thankss
Free cash flow is king. EBITDA is great but for companies with very high non-discretionary capex requirements or R&D it doesn’t work as well because if they are forced to keep investing in physical plant or research to keep their businesses operating, then the the DA is often largely offset by cash committed to maintaining the level of spend placed in facilities and R&D.
As someone that has worked in global corporate finance (M&A) for 30 years, I take issue with your assessment that FCF is "King". As an analyst, I'd say FCF is "unfortunately and detrimentally ignored". So, FCF is probably a Prince or Marquess. :p
This channel is underrated, need a billion subscribers ASAP. this chanel was created in 2020 but UA-cam recommended it to me on 2024😢 I wish it was sooner.
Thanks! It **could** be as the gradually paying down of debt is "Amortization". However, this is only if the interest payments include priniciple. That's not how most corporate debt works. Most are interest-only payments.
I only look at net income, total assets, total debt and dividend . As long as the income is growing or at least making profit and the debt is below 50% of assets and paying dividend, I'll be happy to invest in that company. But for gambling into company, I'll just follow the market hype.
@@vd416 Free Cash Flow (FCF) shows how much cash a company generates after paying for expenses and investments, making it a true measure of profitability and financial health. For value investors is crucial because it reveals if a company can fund its own growth, pay dividends, and withstand downturns, all while offering insights into its intrinsic value. In short, FCF highlights whether a business has solid, sustainable cash flows that can drive long-term value.
EBITDA does not measure profit at all. It measures earnings before you have to pay out a bunch of costs that might eat up all the cashflow...and no profits.
really great video but i think you made a mistake explaining the cost of the car. You may modify it since when you sell the car in year 10 the cost is 0$. Cost in year 10- 3000 of you selling it. If not like this you should sell the car in year 11 because you use it during the year number 10 aswell. I wait for your feedback to know if I am corrrect.
I'm with Buffet here: EBITDA is not a solid indicator of how well a company is actually doing. Too many options for manipulation. No set standard for the calculation.
Hi! There are 2 versions of the ebook: free & paid. Click this link: longtermmindset.co/fssebook - when you fill in your email, i'll send you a copy of the free ebook with 8 infographics as mentioned in the video. You can then upgrade to the full ebook (50 images) if you'd like.
Simples: Free Cash Flow - net of the real money earned or lost from the actual business operations, spent on investments or raised through financing. Net income - the real money earned or lost from the actual business operations or sale of assets + the promises to pay, but who knows if the suppliers or customers will pay or not! EBITDA - the real money + the promises to pay, but who knows if they will pay or not + the money owed to banks as interests and government as taxes etc - i.e. fool's money! Bullshit income! Cash is King - the rest is all bling! More or less.
Love the thumbnail, thought it was clickbait but I was wrong, I don't know where the stock market is headed to right now. my portfolio of around 200k is not increasing more than 5$% and people are predicting a crash.
I thought it was Buffett that said that, I stand corrected. But he is 100% right. Any company can look good if you subtract most of their expenses from the balance sheet! It's no wonder that most companies hide all the real numbers and push EBITDA so hard.
Because it ignores major components of expenses that are vital to keeping a company running. EBITDA assumes you're going to completely stop operating when your current capital assets wear out. And for promoters, if they can find buyers who are ignorant of the fact, it makes the company look a lot better than it actually is.
Ebitda is garbage when a company has a lot of tangible assets. Buying a building you need to produce your product is a real cash expense, its practically an operating expense. Interest on debt is also a real cash expense, it really makes no sense. If a company is always in debt and paying interest, and always investing in new equipment or brick and mortar assets. Ebitda isnt a "better measure of the businesses performance".
Companies love it though, because it always makes them look good! The other one that I love is the companies that exclude "restructuring" costs from their balance sheet, claiming that they are one time expenses and therefore not relevant. Except I worked for a company that had significant "restructuring" costs every single year for over a decade, at that point it's kind of hard to ignore its effect on the money that the company makes!
@@BrianFeroldiYT The cost of the item is a real expense. It should be listed as a one-off expense. It's the spreading it over some thumbsuck "useful life" period that I have a problem with.
Your thumbnail already explain it very clearly
Thanks bro
LOL
thumbnail should have been like in the shining bathroom scene.
Guys I'm a commercial banking credit professional with over 30 years of lending experience spanning the big three major banks. I decided to watch this video and was prepare to be underwhelmed, BUT, dammit you actually nailed it. You did a solid job explaining the basic concepts and then built up from that foundation. The side by side comparisons of each method were helpful for those watching to follow and better understand how these measure tell the analyst different stories. Bravo well done!
Wow - what a compliment!
Clicked because of the hilarious thumbnail
WOW! This explanation was so clear and concise. Thank you so much for working on these videos. They are making important economic concepts accessible to such a wide audience that is eager for this knowledge.
Glad it was useful!
Brilliant Brian. This is genuinely some of the most useful content on all of UA-cam. Thanks for the video!
Thank you! More videos to come every Saturday
Great thumbnail and content to back it up!
Appreciate it!
Thank you. I am a finance student and accounting is one of my... areas with room for improvement. This helped explain a lot.
Glad it was helpful!
Great class ! I d only change ebitda explanation by checking what is included under “others” ….
Hey Brian, thanks a lot for the video! I work in banking and this is truly helpful. A question: why are we only looking at capital expenditures to subtract from Cash from Operations? How I used to look at it, I was taking into account the net flows from investing and servicing of debt in financing activities. In other words, looking at the Net change in cash and cash equivalents.
Hi! There are lots of ways to calculate Free Cash Flow. The one I presented in the video is the simplest and most widely used.
LOVE THE NAME OF THE CHANNEL! Good job buddy! We need more people like you
Thank you!
Thanks! The breakdown was digestible. Good job!
Glad you enjoyed it!
CLEAR AND EASY TO UNDERSTAND EXPLANATIONS. THANK YOU!!! SUBSCRIBED.
Thanks for the sub!
This is an EXCELLENT overview video- thank you! (coming from a CEO)
Wow, thanks!
Very clear thank you. I just have a question regarding the EBITDA calculation :
Since we have a + 1,424 million $ interest income, shouldn't we subtract this amount instead of adding it back ?
thankss
You sure can
Great content! Clearer than my financial statement class haha
Glad to hear it!
Free cash flow is king. EBITDA is great but for companies with very high non-discretionary capex requirements or R&D it doesn’t work as well because if they are forced to keep investing in physical plant or research to keep their businesses operating, then the the DA is often largely offset by cash committed to maintaining the level of spend placed in facilities and R&D.
Bingo
As someone that has worked in global corporate finance (M&A) for 30 years, I take issue with your assessment that FCF is "King". As an analyst, I'd say FCF is "unfortunately and detrimentally ignored". So, FCF is probably a Prince or Marquess. :p
This channel is underrated, need a billion subscribers ASAP. this chanel was created in 2020 but UA-cam recommended it to me on 2024😢 I wish it was sooner.
Wow -- thanks for that :)
Outstanding concise discussion.
Glad to hear that
Thanks you, very clear & simple !
Glad it helped!
Hilarious thumbnail.
Very good examples.
:)
The best thumbnail in the human history!😂
Great video. Would the Amortization charge not be the Debt Repaid under Financing Activities on the Cashflow Statement?
Thanks! It **could** be as the gradually paying down of debt is "Amortization". However, this is only if the interest payments include priniciple. That's not how most corporate debt works. Most are interest-only payments.
Say I wanted to get an accounting degree. Would I study this information in fundamental, intermediate, or advanced accounting?
Yes to all 3
FCF is best… and Price/FCF is the best indicator of under/overvalue.
It’s one of my favorites
Great explanation, thank you!
You are welcome!
Very nice work. Thank you.
Many thanks!
Really really great video. Thank you.
Thanks!
I only look at net income, total assets, total debt and dividend . As long as the income is growing or at least making profit and the debt is below 50% of assets and paying dividend, I'll be happy to invest in that company. But for gambling into company, I'll just follow the market hype.
Bro. You had me at simpular.
great video, clear and direct to the point.
Glad you enjoyed it!
My teacher who teach me finance always says if you only one thing to believe then believe in cash flow...
Accurate
Great information! Thanks for spreading your knowledge for free to us. Curious, did you go to business school to learn all this?
I learned it in business school and then forgot it. Then I relearned it on my own.
Thank you very much
You are welcome
Yo Brian, thank you so much !
My pleasure!
@@BrianFeroldiYT this is really helpful ! Great job !
Thank you for clarification
Glad it was helpful!
Another banger!
Thanks! Putting lots of work into these videos!
It's wild that the inflation of the unit of account (USD in this case) isn't accounted for anywhere
Great explanation.Thank you very much.
Glad it was helpful!
Free cash flow is king.
Agreed!
Why
@@vd416 Free Cash Flow (FCF) shows how much cash a company generates after paying for expenses and investments, making it a true measure of profitability and financial health. For value investors is crucial because it reveals if a company can fund its own growth, pay dividends, and withstand downturns, all while offering insights into its intrinsic value. In short, FCF highlights whether a business has solid, sustainable cash flows that can drive long-term value.
EBITDA does not measure profit at all. It measures earnings before you have to pay out a bunch of costs that might eat up all the cashflow...and no profits.
Correct
How depreciation and amortization will eat cash flow 🤔
As Charlie Munger once said, "EBITDA is bullsh*t earnings".
great. thanks. i learned something.
Glad it was helpful!
Pretty sure most of the viewers clicked the video because of valuable intel ( Sydney Sweeney )😂
Well EBITDA is a pretty hot topic.
What was the thumbnail?
Young Sydney sweeney who is hot and the AI generated old lady who looked like Sydney sweeney
hahaha ... it was brilliant 😅 .
@@lordvader6072Haha. That old lady is Iggy Pop, which is why Im here 😂
😅Only an Accountant can fit in so much useful information within a 10 minute video
Glad it was helpful!
Great video, outstanding explanation 🤌🏼
Thanks for watching!
Subscriber from India
Welcome!
In short ---- always evaluate with FCFF. You will never be led astray.
It’s a much more reliable predictor than the other metrics
saw thumbnail, instant sub
LOL
Ok thanks! Now without reading script!
Would be much harder to make these videos succintly without a script
Very good explanation.
Glad it was helpful!
Why is Iggy = FCF?
really great video but i think you made a mistake explaining the cost of the car. You may modify it since when you sell the car in year 10 the cost is 0$. Cost in year 10- 3000 of you selling it. If not like this you should sell the car in year 11 because you use it during the year number 10 aswell.
I wait for your feedback to know if I am corrrect.
That's just a simple example to explain the concept
I'm with Buffet here: EBITDA is not a solid indicator of how well a company is actually doing. Too many options for manipulation. No set standard for the calculation.
Ditto
Nice vid
Thanks for watching
how I can get Ebook for free I try the link but it want me to pay for full vision i just need the free vision
Hi! There are 2 versions of the ebook: free & paid. Click this link: longtermmindset.co/fssebook - when you fill in your email, i'll send you a copy of the free ebook with 8 infographics as mentioned in the video. You can then upgrade to the full ebook (50 images) if you'd like.
Great video
Thanks for the visit!
Thank you!
Welcome!
Simples:
Free Cash Flow - net of the real money earned or lost from the actual business operations, spent on investments or raised through financing.
Net income - the real money earned or lost from the actual business operations or sale of assets + the promises to pay, but who knows if the suppliers or customers will pay or not!
EBITDA - the real money + the promises to pay, but who knows if they will pay or not + the money owed to banks as interests and government as taxes etc - i.e. fool's money! Bullshit income!
Cash is King - the rest is all bling! More or less.
Cool, now please tell us about Community Adjusted EBITDA 😂
Lol
Thanks 😊
Thanks for watching!
2:38 If the red bars were all shorter, it would have made more sense compared to 1:57.
Amazing !
Thank you! Cheers!
I'm here for all the information lol 🤓
👍
I still don’t get why the metric is called cash *flow*, and not account balance.
Where is the flow in a that?
Because Cash is constantly coming in
Cash is the king!
agreed on that!
mAN! yOUR GREAT AT EXPLAINING IT TO ME!
No one talking about paying only 3.5% on income taxes, while us, the workers, paying 40%…….. bastards
Love the thumbnail, thought it was clickbait but I was wrong, I don't know where the stock market is headed to right now. my portfolio of around 200k is not increasing more than 5$% and people are predicting a crash.
Awesome
dont know what happend but I tried to get the free copy u offer, and didnt work, couldnt get it,
meaning, I COULDNT GET THE FREE COPY U PROMOTE,
I just tried and it worked fine. Can you try again?
"Every time you hear 'EBITDA', substitute it for bullshit earnings"
- Charlie Munger
I made a whole video about that!
@@BrianFeroldiYT :)
I thought it was Buffett that said that, I stand corrected. But he is 100% right. Any company can look good if you subtract most of their expenses from the balance sheet! It's no wonder that most companies hide all the real numbers and push EBITDA so hard.
Nothing like non-GAAP earnings measures. PP&E and intangible assets suddenly become free!
I think both Buffet and Munger have said it. EBITDA is for fly-by-night promoters.
why are you yelling at me
Why is EBITDA USED AS A MULTIPLIER TO VALUE OR SELL A BIZ?
Because it ignores major components of expenses that are vital to keeping a company running. EBITDA assumes you're going to completely stop operating when your current capital assets wear out. And for promoters, if they can find buyers who are ignorant of the fact, it makes the company look a lot better than it actually is.
@@billmartin1663 what type of major components of expenses if I may ask?
Comparing Sydney Sweeney to Iggy Pop was not on my 2024 bingo card.
It was the thumbnail you didn’t know you needed
Most business owners can’t make sense of any of these measurements.
Best way to get this is through turnkey assets like I have been able to attain
I prefer Iggy anyway
lol
Truncating $73.795B to $73.7B rather than rounding to $73.8B. Interesting.
Iggy Pop❤,is a safe bet.
Lol
Ebitda is garbage when a company has a lot of tangible assets.
Buying a building you need to produce your product is a real cash expense, its practically an operating expense. Interest on debt is also a real cash expense, it really makes no sense.
If a company is always in debt and paying interest, and always investing in new equipment or brick and mortar assets. Ebitda isnt a "better measure of the businesses performance".
Agreed
Or to quote Charlie Munger, “Ebitda earnings are bullshit earnings”. Or Warren Buffett, “ Profit is an opinion, cash is a fact.”
Companies love it though, because it always makes them look good! The other one that I love is the companies that exclude "restructuring" costs from their balance sheet, claiming that they are one time expenses and therefore not relevant. Except I worked for a company that had significant "restructuring" costs every single year for over a decade, at that point it's kind of hard to ignore its effect on the money that the company makes!
I see sydney sweeny
I click
Lol
Still waiting for Iggy Pop to show up in the video.
Lol
And the chick, for that matter
Sales
EBITDA
NP (EPS)
FCF
that's it, nothing more
So free cash flow is more punk you mean?
Depends on your definition of punk, I guess
Why is he screaming?
He’s American
There's a lot of bs in accounting to make it sound or look intelligent when it's not.
Just want you to know I am watching this video because of the title. Not everyone cares about the celebrities in the Thumbnail
Thanks!
Lol😂😂 that's Sidney when she comes 30 with botox.
Bro what is this thumbnail 🤣😆
Eye catchy, right?
Now start over and explain this like you would to a 5yo
Did my best to do just that
Now explain why accrual accounting is a thing. Depreciation is just another bullshit accounting trick.
Disagree. Depreciation is a real expense.
@@BrianFeroldiYT The cost of the item is a real expense. It should be listed as a one-off expense. It's the spreading it over some thumbsuck "useful life" period that I have a problem with.
click bait
Unneeded data. Buy ETF and don't waste time.
Nothing wrong with ETFs
Sorry but you are wrong right at the beginning. Revenue - expenses = GROSS INCOME. After taxes you get NET INCOME.
Taxes are an expense
I might have misunderstood the vocabulary here.
☝
Revenue - COGS = Gross Income
Every time you see EBITDA, just substitute it with «bullshit earnings».
- Charlie Munger
I made a video on why