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Principles of Finance: Unit 9, The Elusive Nature and Notion of Profits 4 Views
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Description:
The elusive nature and notion of profits.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of Finance a la shmoop the elusive nature and notion of profits
- 00:08
successes Google Amazon Facebook Netflix Tesla Coke Starbucks Disney cheers Envy [multiple brand shooting onto screen]
- 00:15
mumblings about why they were successful in your little coffee bar wasn't yeah [unhappy coffee barista]
- 00:21
America got to its lofty perch by celebrating winners commercial success [hand places trophy on shelf]
- 00:26
and you know being a weapon supplier to Europe during its conflicts and taking [world map showing exchange of weapons for money]
Full Transcript
- 00:30
advantage of market swings as they came and went under the tent pole of a very
- 00:34
fair and trusted investment and capital market system oh and we stole a ton of [teepees on fire]
- 00:39
land from the Indians and pretty much killed nearly all of them too anyway by [men waking through forest with rifles]
- 00:43
hook and by crook we got here we're wealthy successful envied by most [woman holding money in font of the Statue of Liberty]
- 00:47
of the rest of the world that's why they want to bomb us all the time but ok not [rocket flying through air]
- 00:52
envied by you New Zealand and nobody wants to bomb you guys but ok everyone [beautiful New Zealand landscape]
- 00:56
else pretty much but there's a pattern that comes to the successful usually in
- 01:01
the form of a very I'm Randian set of mumblings by the less successful who you
- 01:06
know envy and we want to tear down the successful sometimes for good reason [hand pushes trophy off shelf]
- 01:10
sometimes for bad so when a given business begins to be enormous ly
- 01:14
profitable it comes under the white-hot spotlight of scorn derision envy and
- 01:19
rancor from wealth everyone who didn't think of the idea themselves the quote [Google logo put under a desk lamp]
- 01:23
Little People unquote the governed alright well you know what we're talking
- 01:27
about the people who simply would never take the risk of starting and running a
- 01:31
business where failure was indeed an option a very very bad one and usually a
- 01:36
very likely one or anyone who makes a relatively small fixed salary you know
- 01:41
working for the government for those outside of the bubble of business well [hand holds magnifying glass up to cash check]
- 01:44
the whole notion of profit can be seen as something evil as if profits are bad [thief steals profit from infant's hands]
- 01:50
and somehow taking away candy from babies well by now you've watched our
- 01:54
video hopefully on the Communist Manifesto [Shmoop website]
- 01:57
not everyone who scoffs at profits is a strict communist per se that text had
- 02:02
the same attitude ie the profits really are the creation of the evil doing
- 02:06
thieves and profits should be held intentionally at zero meaning that there
- 02:10
should be no profits why well profits belong
- 02:13
to the people or something like that instead of selling that toothbrush for [thief launches profits into crowd]
- 02:17
four bucks you ought to sell it for two twelve and just break even so as we [tooth brushes stocked on store shelf]
- 02:21
begin to digest what profits really are and the structural and ethical drivers [man eating candy]
- 02:25
behind them if you feel nauseous well maybe check
- 02:28
out scenic Cuba for a moment it's the only true communist country left on [wasteland pictures of Cuba]
- 02:33
earth check out their lovely beaches the great well fed population the buildings
- 02:38
there and the cars yeah well okay at least they have their cigars all right
- 02:41
now let's paint a picture of Mali's green nice and clean washing machine [woman near white laundry]
- 02:46
company Molly created a beautiful way to clean clothes using solar power
- 02:50
limestone and almost no soap the machines have been selling for 1,500
- 02:55
bucks at retail for a while now years they cost her 850 all in and she makes [writing on white board]
- 02:59
six hundred and fifty dollars a machine but every now and then someone realizes
- 03:03
that they live in a cloudy area or really wanted to do their wash at night
- 03:08
so a few washing machines get sent back and there's a restocking fee or a cost [man rolls washing machine back]
- 03:13
actually she didn't collect the fee there's other delivery charges against
- 03:17
her money-back guarantee that she eats so the real cost of her in practice it's
- 03:22
more like 900 bucks and he really makes 600 bucks a machine I didn't think about [writing on white board]
- 03:27
that well but all good so far she has 500 employees and runs the company in a
- 03:31
rural area of the country she can pay her employees a decent wage but nothing [hand places large stack of cash on table]
- 03:35
city like in this rural area you know they lead a nice life things are cheap [pictures of countryside with cows]
- 03:39
in the country sells the fresh air one year she sells 10,000 machines at 600
- 03:44
and profit each and make six million dollars one of the employees blabs about
- 03:47
this number to the local paper and she's both vilified and honored as the paper [newspaper article]
- 03:52
notes that her highest paid employee makes a hundred thousand dollars a year
- 03:55
while she has raked in six million dollars this year but the country's mood
- 04:00
changes one day people have given up on climate change and the next year she
- 04:04
only sells 5,000 machines at the next year 3,000 machines and then things
- 04:08
stabilized at 2,000 machines well at these lower rates she's actually losing
- 04:13
money because she has a high fixed cost to operate that is she still has to [money on fire]
- 04:17
employ the 500 people online there pay the rent of the building and buy the [workers in factory]
- 04:21
steel and the solar panels and the infrastructure to keep everything in
- 04:24
place so it's three years later and she's losing him
- 04:26
million dollars a year hoping that the tide turns shows until he's tied in her
- 04:30
washing machines and people care about green washing machines again
- 04:34
well she's desperately trying to not have to fire some of the 500 employees
- 04:38
she has dutifully been paying what happened to the snarky newspaper
- 04:41
articles griping about her greedy and userís profits of a few years ago well [newspaper article]
- 04:47
guess what much of that 600 million bucks that she'd stored away is used up
- 04:51
now it's gone so what should she do continue losing money operating the
- 04:56
company hmm well the business ethics here are complex and they revolve in
- 05:00
large part around the definition and the notion of profits and what they really
- 05:04
reflect that is business doesn't exist like the Olympics there isn't one day in
- 05:08
Tokyo when everyone lines up and determines who's the best in the world [competing companies swim in a race]
- 05:12
in the 400 medley relay and well that's it businesses are long-term greedy yet
- 05:18
they get evaluated generally quarterly or at least annually so think about poor
- 05:23
Molly desperately trying to hang on while thinking broadly that a climate [woman swimming laps]
- 05:27
change is still happening be people who have bought her product love it and see
- 05:32
people will always get dirty and need to do the wash well logically her product
- 05:37
works it has a voice and a place in the market and there will be a demand for it
- 05:41
so it's not like she believes the man will never come back it will she just
- 05:45
has to hang on long enough for it to do so well should the world have maybe
- 05:49
thought about her 6 million dollar profit windfall differently had she been [hand swipes newspaper]
- 05:53
successful for a long time and had stockpiled say 40 million dollars in the
- 05:58
bank well then she could have easily weathered a bad decade and then
- 06:01
dominated the green washing machine industry after that right her cash stash
- 06:06
would have been depleted down to say only 20 million dollars or maybe less
- 06:09
but she'd still have a business those 500 people would go on gainfully
- 06:13
employed but she didn't she listened to the naysayers read the local newspaper
- 06:18
didn't fight back when local townspeople levied taxes on her and charged filing
- 06:23
fees for this and for that and cut into her profits and balance sheet [saw cutting money pile in half]
- 06:27
relentlessly and Molly never had the gumption to just
- 06:30
move production to another city or China or Mexico or Africa where she could have [world map]
- 06:36
saved a fortune and would have been loved by everyone there so here's
- 06:39
Molly's corporate Diggs now yeah it looks a little bit
- 06:42
like Cuba any major industries you can think of that have had to weather a
- 06:46
similar storm yep Texas tea back in 2005 oil was trading at a hundred bucks a [oil rig]
- 06:51
barrel it subsequently dropped to under $40 a barrel and stayed there a very
- 06:55
long time the once vaunted wealthy oil companies lost all the profits they'd
- 07:00
saved and then some essentially had to borrow money just to pay their stock
- 07:04
dividends and remember that for a long time dividends were what old people
- 07:07
retired on so they counted on that dividend to be there well then that old
- 07:11
station wagon was gonna need a portable sink and you know a nicer mattress for [old man sitting outside car]
- 07:15
Grandma to sleep in with oil having plunged in price there was also no
- 07:19
appetite for exploratory drilling for new oil nor was there much pressure to [drill going into ocean bed]
- 07:24
look for alternative fuel sources wind power solar all that bottom line the key
- 07:28
mission of a business is to continue running as a business like it's to live
- 07:33
and rainy days come all the time and profits are you know kind of water and
- 07:37
food and shelter and that whole story dance there yeah so the next time
- 07:41
someone mumbles some complain about someone getting too rich or making too
- 07:46
much dough or having excess profits ask them to define excess and then please
- 07:51
send us at some of the answer we'd love to know
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