Hi,
Was just playing around with modeling. Say a company only releases segmented income statements, but does not mention the specific revenues / op income it generates from a new product, is it still possible to model that item’s contribution to the bottom line? For example:
Company XYZ has
a film segment: 30 percent op margin
a game segment: 40 percent op margin
a license segment: 25 percent op margin
effective tax rate: 30%
XYZ releases a new movie that grosses $1 billion in the global BO. Is it possible to get a rough gauge of how much this movie will contribute to the bottom line? Would it go something like this:
Movie generates $1b, after splitting sales with theaters, it takes in $500 million. Take this $500 million and subtract cost to make + market the movie..say $100 million (which includes interest and depreciation expense). Then multiply it by XYZ’s effective tax rate of .30 (30%).
Leaving with a rough estimate of $280 million or so going to NI from the $1b in revenue.
Or is there a better way? Thanks!
Was just playing around with modeling. Say a company only releases segmented income statements, but does not mention the specific revenues / op income it generates from a new product, is it still possible to model that item’s contribution to the bottom line? For example:
Company XYZ has
a film segment: 30 percent op margin
a game segment: 40 percent op margin
a license segment: 25 percent op margin
effective tax rate: 30%
XYZ releases a new movie that grosses $1 billion in the global BO. Is it possible to get a rough gauge of how much this movie will contribute to the bottom line? Would it go something like this:
Movie generates $1b, after splitting sales with theaters, it takes in $500 million. Take this $500 million and subtract cost to make + market the movie..say $100 million (which includes interest and depreciation expense). Then multiply it by XYZ’s effective tax rate of .30 (30%).
Leaving with a rough estimate of $280 million or so going to NI from the $1b in revenue.
Or is there a better way? Thanks!