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Net Margins

Net Margins (also known as 'Net Profit Margin') is the ultimate “bottom line” measure of a company's Profitability. Think of it as the final scorecard for a business. After a company collects all its Revenue (the money from sales), it has to pay a mountain of bills: the cost of its products (Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)), employee salaries, marketing budgets, rent (Operating Expenses), plus Interest on its debts and, of course, Taxes to the government. The little bit of money left over at the very end is the Net Income. The net margin simply tells you what percentage of the total revenue that final profit represents. It answers the crucial question: for every dollar the company makes in sales, how many cents does it actually get to keep?

How Do You Calculate It?

Calculating the net margin is refreshingly simple. You just need two numbers, both of which are found on a company's Income Statement.

The Formula

The formula is: Net Margin (%) = (Net Income / Revenue) x 100

By dividing the bottom line by the top line, you get a clear picture of the business's overall efficiency.

Why Should a Value Investor Care?

For a Value Investing enthusiast, net margin is one of the most revealing metrics. It's a window into the quality and durability of a business.

A Sign of a Great Business

A consistently high net margin is often the hallmark of a company with a strong Competitive Moat. This means the business has a durable advantage that protects it from competitors. This advantage could come from:

A business that can consistently keep 20, 30, or even 40 cents of every dollar in sales is a truly exceptional machine. It's a clear signal that the company is doing something its competitors can't easily replicate.

The Power of Comparison

A single net margin figure is useful, but its true power is unlocked through comparison.

The Pitfalls: What to Watch Out For

While powerful, the net margin shouldn't be used in a vacuum. Context is everything.

A Quick Example

Imagine two coffee shop chains, “BeanCo” and “MugLife,” operating in the same city.

Even though MugLife makes more sales, BeanCo is the far superior business. For every dollar of coffee it sells, it keeps 15 cents, three times more than MugLife. As an investor, you'd immediately be more interested in figuring out why BeanCo is so much more profitable. That's the beginning of great investment analysis.