Some of the most fascinating topics covered this week are: Finance (A new term emerging in this crisis), Business (The world's most coveted commodity right now; crash of the global flower business trade), and Coronavirus (The pandemic stress test; When fury overcomes fear; India's revival plan must focus on cities)
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At Ambit, we spend a lot of time reading articles that cover a wide gamut of topics, ranging from zeitgeist to futuristic, and encapsulate them in our weekly ‘Ten Interesting Things’ product. Some of the most fascinating topics covered this week are: Finance (A new term emerging in this crisis), Business (The world’s most coveted commodity right now; crash of the global flower business trade), and Coronavirus (The pandemic stress test; When fury overcomes fear; India’s revival plan must focus on cities).
Here are the ten most interesting pieces that we read this week, ended May 22, 2020:
1) Pandemic spawns new reporting term ‘ebitdac’ to flatter books [Source: Financial Times]
Coronavirus has changed many things around us. One such change is in the corporate world is that of reporting financial numbers. Now some companies are presenting a new customised metric, EBITDAC: earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortisation — and coronavirus. Schenck Process, a German manufacturing group, added back 5.4m euros of first-quarter profits that it said it would have made were it not for the hit caused by state-mandated lockdowns. Its operating profit for the period, “adjusted ebitdac” of 18.3m euros, was almost 20% higher than the same period a year earlier, rather than 16% lower.
Some investors said they are concerned; increased usage of this new brand of ebitda could allow companies to relax restrictions on how much they can borrow. Some companies that have had their revenues plunge because of nationwide lockdowns have sought waivers from their banks to ease their discomfort. “How can they quantify whether a loss in revenue is purely down to coronavirus and not revenue they’ve lost to competitors or for regulatory reasons?” asked Nick Kordowski, Edinburgh-based head of fixed income non-financial research at Aberdeen Standard Investments.