Yes it is and in time they'll be making money on their EV offerings.Sure, and that's great. It is also good that they are improving in their EV operations.
Yes it is and in time they'll be making money on their EV offerings.Sure, and that's great. It is also good that they are improving in their EV operations.
Do you have the numbers? If so please post them if not then why the guessing game?Fair question; the Managerial Accounting branch of Finance. GM is only using direct costs vs revenue. Like saying a shop made money on a $30 oil change because the oil and filter cost them $29. What about labor and overhead? Warranty hold back? The devil is in the details, as always.
I would like to see their "direct costs" cost components, but it is clearly not what it costs GM to deliver the vehicle.
Variable profit is an important metric because a company will generally continue to increase production in the relevant range (as long as they can sell) as long as the variable profit can contribute to the fixed cost. And as long as the revenue generated from selling additional units exceeds the variable costs of producing those units... Maximize asset utilization.
At capacity, the fixed costs will force the manufacturer to make hard decisions. If variable costs rise (such as procurement), the calculation changes. This is critical in production scheduling in the short term and long term corporate growth direction decisions.
Does this answer your question? The is more. I love cost accounting; it let's us know if we are making a nickel or losing a nickel and paves the way to the future.
Debt to the CCP does not matter. The CCP owns the banks. Xi can say there is no more debt, and there is no more debt. No one really knows how much money China has created, most estimates are 4X more than the fed since 2008. Trying to apply western principles to China is why we keep losing to them.BYD is hiding massive debt with Chinese bookkeeping.
Exactly. If you spend 8 minutes in the accounting office you figure out they can allocate centralized costs wherever they like. So long as the books balance in the end, no one cares. For all we know the EV segment could be absorbing all the R&D costs for for the entire company - or none. The books will show whatever they need them to show. So long as the top line and bottom line are accurate - no foul was committed.I don't know why some people are hung up on GM losing money on their EVs. GM is a huge corporation, they lose money on EV's, they make money on ICE. When you take all of their operations into account, they, GM the entity made money for the quarter, and for the year. If you want to play with the math, they lost less money per EV this year. They will eventually make money on EV's w/o the fuzzy math. The good news for GM is if EV sales tank Globally and ICE sales rise, they're going to end up better off than a company that only makes and sells EVs. If EV sales only tank in the US and ICE is up, that's good for them too.
Debt to the CCP does not matter. The CCP owns the banks. Xi can say there is no more debt, and there is no more debt. No one really knows how much money China has created, most estimates are 4X more than the fed since 2008. Trying to apply western principles to China is why we keep losing to them.
No, I don't have the numbers. Nor do I care. I tried to explain cost accounting in an attempt to answer your question.Do you have the numbers? If so please post them if not then why the guessing game?
In all my years I have never seen a manufacturing line not include all variable costs like labor, and energy, as direct costs. To use your oil change analogy - it would include the oil, filter, lube tech's time, shop towels, percentage of electricity attributed to operating for that change, and any environmental or recycling costs. It would not include the cost of the building or advertising or management.Fair question; the Managerial Accounting branch of Finance. GM is only using direct costs vs revenue. Like saying a shop made money on a $30 oil change because the oil and filter cost them $29. What about labor and overhead?
Absolutely, but there is a caveat. Certain published numbers, like revenue, have to follow rules. Like you said, companies do not all use the same formulas, often for good reason. The SEC will hold you to follow the rules you have established, aka consistancy. I worked closely with Finance to establish the Revenue Recognition reporting for a multi billion $$ SEMI company.Additionally like I said before, indirect or shared costs can be plastered around to wherever the accountants think it makes the most sense. So in reality, you never really know who is paying for what - an age old problem in manufacturing.
Yes, but none of that is what were talking about. Top line Revenue has to be exact - that is all the money that is taken in.Absolutely, but there is a caveat. Certain published numbers, like revenue, have to follow rules. Like you said, companies do not all use the same formulas, often for good reason. The SEC will hold you to follow the rules you have established, aka consistancy. I worked closely with Finance to establish the Revenue Recognition reporting for a multi billion $$ SEMI company.
Cost components can be far more complicated, when you include warranty costs, royalties, installation and process qual, etc.
It becomes impossible to compare companies to investors, at least on a detailed level.
Well, it's not nearly that simple... Are you familiar with SAB 101 and 104? Revenue Recognition, Deferred Revenue, Cost, etc?Yes, but none of that is what were talking about. Top line Revenue has to be exact - that is all the money that is taken in.
Profits have to be exact, that is shareholder money.
Costs have to be exact. But they don't really care if I assign 100% of the costs to this department or that - so long as the costs add up at the end. So how I assign costs to EV's vs Silverado's has a bit of wiggle room.
That's what we keep hearing. "Waiting for the big boys to compete with Tesla. " I feel like I've heard that somewhere.But only Tesla can make a profit on EVs. It is set in stone.
Dude for the last time - I am not talking about revenue.Well, it's not nearly that simple... Are you familiar with SAB 101 and 104? Revenue Recognition, Deferred Revenue, Cost, etc?
They were profitable, that's the bottom line. Eventually their EVs will be profitable too. Every EV sold that isn't a Tesla is one less EV sale for Tesla. GM has a major advantage over Tesla, from millions of people like me who won't buy an EV. They still have a chance of selling millions of us an ICE vehicle, and their ICE sales were very strong, and profitable.Dude for the last time - I am not talking about revenue.
Even if I were how much deferred revenue can an auto OEM have. There not taking progress payments on a reactor or leasing intellectual property.
And as I have commented the big boys are BYD and there not allowed to compete - here at least.That's what we keep hearing. "Waiting for the big boys to compete with Tesla. " I feel like I've heard that somewhere.
Actually they weren't. Hence the stock down 10%They were profitable, that's the bottom line.
They will make dozens of dollars. Dozens!Yes it is and in time they'll be making money on their EV offerings.
You've lost me. I've tried to respond to your posts. Please explain your point.Dude for the last time - I am not talking about revenue.
Even if I were how much deferred revenue can an auto OEM have. There not taking progress payments on a reactor or leasing intellectual property.