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#51
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In article .com,
"Robert M. Gary" wrote: The point is that "profit" is not an absolute. There is a cost to using your money that is very, very tightly related to how the company is financed. If you are a publicly traded company you must earn a return to make your investors happy (usually calculated as risk free rate (T-bills) plus risk premium for your stock). If you are financed by debtors the the cost of your capitol is just the interest rate you pay. All investors expect to get returns, but at different rates. This is why companies have finance departments that know their "cost of capitol". So it is wrong to say "you must make a profit". If a product would produce a "profit" of 2% but your investors expect a 10% return, you are losing money and should not produce the product. This is where companies financed through debt have an advantage (their cost of capitol is often lower). I didn't say "you must make a profit." I said that you must be profitable to stay in business--which is an absolute truth in a capitalist economy. How the business is financed is irrelevant if it isn't profitable, at least over the long term. The entire purpose of any investment is to make money. I also said that the goal of every business is maximum profitability. Any attempt to cap profitability (such as with taxes or tariffs or direct price controls) will discourage new investment and production. Any business that operates at break-even won't last long against its competitors who are profitable and able to make further investments in the business to compete in the market economy. And it's still my contention that "capitol" is a building. JKG |
#52
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In article .com,
"Robert M. Gary" wrote: Most businesses in the United States do not have debt traded on the public market--they are small businesses. In this case, profitability is even more important because the number of private debtors is usually relatively small and the window of opportunity to turn loss to profit is much narrower. Again, you are using the term "profit" in an accounting way. If you are a small company there is cost for you to use your money to produce the product. If you are using your own money in the bank, then that cost is the lost opportunity cost you could have had if you had left the money in the bank, plus something for your risk. If you borrow money, the cost is the cost to borrow the money. If you have investors (which is what you are when you own a small company) the cost of capitol is the return you require for it to be worth it to continue to invest in your company. If a product is going to return 0.5% then you'd be a fool to invest in it, just buy T-bills. You need to return a "profit" that matches your cost of capitol. -Robert, MBA Since you're an MBA, maybe this is all going over your head. Explain to me, please, how a business can stay in business is a competitive market economy without being profitable. What incentive does the business have to produce anything if it can't be profitable? How will the business compete if it can't invest in itself? How will it attract investors to help finance growth if there isn't opportunity for maximum profitability? I would be interested in your answers, but will suggest that perhaps we should take this off-line at this point, since it's evolved into something not directly related to this group. JKG |
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