Retained Earnings in Accounting and What They Can Tell You

What Are Retained Earnings?

Retained earnings are the cumulative net earnings or profits of a company after accounting for dividend payments. As an important concept in accounting, the word “retained” captures the fact that because those earnings were not paid out to shareholders as dividends, they were instead retained by the company.

For this reason, retained earnings decrease when a company either loses money or pays dividends and increase when new profits are created.

Key Takeaways

  • Retained earnings (RE) are the amount of net income left over for the business after it has paid out dividends to its shareholders.
  • The decision to retain the earnings or distribute them among shareholders is usually left to company management.
  • A growth-focused company may not pay dividends at all or pay very small amounts because it may prefer to use retained earnings to finance expansion activities.
  • Companies may choose to use their retained earnings for increasing production capacity, hiring more sales representatives, launching a new product, or share buybacks, among others.
  • Retained earnings are an important variable for assessing a company’s financial health because they show the net income that a company has saved over time, and therefore can reinvest in the business or distribute to shareholders.
Retained Earnings

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Retained Earnings Formula and Calculation

RE = BP + Net Income (or Loss) C S where: BP = Beginning Period RE C = Cash dividends S = Stock dividends \begin{aligned} &\text{RE} = \text{BP} + \text{Net Income (or Loss)} - \text{C} - \text{S} \\ &\textbf{where:}\\ &\text{BP} = \text{Beginning Period RE} \\ &\text{C} = \text{Cash dividends} \\ &\text{S} = \text{Stock dividends} \\ \end{aligned} RE=BP+Net Income (or Loss)CSwhere:BP=Beginning Period REC=Cash dividendsS=Stock dividends

What Can Retained Earnings Tell You?

Retained earnings refer to the historical profits earned by a company, minus any dividends it paid in the past. To get a better understanding of what retained earnings can tell you, the following options broadly cover all possible uses that a company can make of its surplus money. For instance, the first option leads to the earnings money going out of the books and accounts of the business forever because dividend payments are irreversible.

All of the other options retain the earnings for use within the business, and such investments and funding activities constitute retained earnings.

  • The income money can be distributed (fully or partially) among the business owners (shareholders) in the form of dividends.
  • It can be invested to expand existing business operations, like increasing the production capacity of the existing products or hiring more sales representatives.
  • It can be invested to launch a new product/variant, like a refrigerator maker foraying into producing air conditioners or a chocolate cookie manufacturer launching orange- or pineapple-flavored variants.
  • The money can be used for any possible merger, acquisition, or partnership that leads to improved business prospects.
  • It can also be used for share buybacks.
  • The earnings can be used to repay any outstanding loan (debt) that the business may owe.

Retained earnings are also called earnings surplus and represent reserve money, which is available to company management for reinvesting back into the business. When expressed as a percentage of total earnings, it is also called the retention ratio and is equal to (1 - the dividend payout ratio).

Though the last option of debt repayment also leads to the money going out of the business, it still has an impact on the business’s accounts (for example, on saving future interest payments, which qualifies it for inclusion in retained earnings).

Profits give a lot of room to the business owner(s) or the company management to use the surplus money earned. This profit is often paid out to shareholders, but it can also be reinvested back into the company for growth purposes. The money not paid to shareholders counts as retained earnings.

Management and Retained Earnings

The decision to retain earnings or to distribute them among shareholders is usually left to the company management. However, it can be challenged by the shareholders through a majority vote because they are the real owners of the company.

Management and shareholders may want the company to retain earnings for several different reasons. Being better informed about the market and the company’s business, the management may have a high-growth project in view, which they may perceive as a candidate for generating substantial returns in the future.

In the long run, such initiatives may lead to better returns for the company shareholders instead of those gained from dividend payouts. Paying off high-interest debt also may be preferred by both management and shareholders, instead of dividend payments.

On the other hand, when a company generates surplus income, a portion of the long-term shareholders may expect some regular income in the form of dividends as a reward for putting their money into the company. Traders who look for short-term gains may also prefer dividend payments that offer instant gains.

Most often, the company’s management takes a balanced approach. It involves paying out a nominal amount of dividends and retaining a good portion of the earnings, which offers a win-win.

What Is the Difference Between Retained Earnings and Dividends?

Dividends can be distributed in the form of cash or stock. Both forms of distribution reduce retained earnings. Cash payment of dividends leads to cash outflow and is recorded in the books and accounts as net reductions. As the company loses ownership of its liquid assets in the form of cash dividends, it reduces the company’s asset value on the balance sheet, thereby impacting RE.

On the other hand, though stock dividends do not lead to a cash outflow, the stock payment transfers part of the retained earnings to common stock. For instance, if a company pays one share as a dividend for each share held by the investors, the price per share will reduce to half because the number of shares will essentially double. Because the company has not created any real value simply by announcing a stock dividend, the per-share market price is adjusted according to the proportion of the stock dividend.

Though the increase in the number of shares may not impact the company’s balance sheet because the market price is automatically adjusted, it decreases the per-share valuation, which is reflected in capital accounts, thereby impacting the RE.

A growth-focused company may not pay dividends at all or pay very small amounts because it may prefer to use retained earnings to finance activities such as research and development (R&D), marketing, working capital requirements, capital expenditures, and acquisitions to achieve additional growth. Such companies have high retained earnings over the years.

A maturing company may not have many options or high-return projects for which to use the surplus cash, and it may prefer handing out dividends. Such companies tend to have low RE.

What Is the Difference Between Retained Earnings and Revenue?

Both revenue and retained earnings are important in evaluating a company’s financial health, but they highlight different aspects of the financial picture. Revenue sits at the top of the income statement and is often referred to as the top-line number when describing a company’s financial performance.

Revenue is the money generated by a company during a period but before operating expenses and overhead costs are deducted. In some industries, revenue is called gross sales because the gross figure is calculated before any deductions.

Retained earnings are the portion of a company’s cumulative profit that is held or retained and saved for future use. Retained earnings could be used for funding an expansion or paying dividends to shareholders at a later date. Retained earnings are related to net (as opposed to gross) income because they are the net income amount saved by a company over time.

What Are the Limitations of Retained Earnings?

For an analyst, the absolute figure of retained earnings during a particular quarter or year may not provide any meaningful insight. Observing it over a period of time (for example, over five years) only indicates the trend of how much money a company is adding to retained earnings.

As an investor, one would like to know much more—such as the returns that the retained earnings have generated and if they were better than any alternative investments. Additionally, investors may prefer to see larger dividends rather than significant annual increases to retained earnings.

What Is Retained Earnings to Market Value?

One way to assess how successful a company is in using retained money is to look at a key factor called retained earnings to market value. It is calculated over a period of time (usually a couple of years) and assesses the change in stock price against the net earnings retained by the company.

For example, during the period from September 2016 through September 2020, Apple Inc.’s (AAPL) stock price rose from around $28 to around $112 per share. During the same period, the total earnings per share (EPS) was $13.61, while the total dividend paid out by the company was $3.38 per share.

As the 2020 10-K form indicates, Apple had the following EPS and dividend figures over the given time frame, and summing them up gives the above values for total EPS and total dividend.

A snippet of Apple’s financials for 2016 to 2020

The difference between total EPS and total dividend gives the net earnings retained by the company: $13.61 - $3.38 = $10.23. That is, over the period, the company retained a total of $10.23 earnings per share.

Over the same duration, its stock price rose by $84 ($112 - $28) per share. Dividing this price rise per share by net earnings retained per share gives a factor of 8.21 ($84 ÷ $10.23), which indicates that for each dollar of retained earnings, the company managed to create around $8.21 of market value.

If the company had not retained this money and instead taken an interest-bearing loan, the value generated would have been less due to the outgoing interest payment. Retained earnings offer internally generated capital to finance projects, allowing for efficient value creation by profitable companies. However, note that the above calculation is indicative of the value created with respect to the use of retained earnings only, and it does not indicate the overall value created by the company.

Retained Earnings Example

Companies publicly record retained earnings under the shareholders’ equity section on the balance sheet. For instance, Apple’s balance sheet from the third fiscal quarter (fiscal Q3) of 2019 shows that the company had retained earnings of $53.72 billion as of the end of the quarter in June 2019:

Apple Inc. Balance Sheet on June 29, 2019

Similarly, the iPhone maker, whose fiscal year ends in September, had $70.4 billion in retained earnings as of September 2018.

The retained earnings are calculated by adding net income to (or subtracting net losses from) the previous term’s retained earnings and then subtracting any net dividend(s) paid to the shareholders.

The figure is calculated at the end of each accounting period (monthly/quarterly/annually). As the formula suggests, retained earnings are dependent on the corresponding figure of the previous term. The resultant number may be either positive or negative, depending upon the net income or loss generated by the company over time. Alternatively, the company paying large dividends that exceed the other figures can also lead to the retained earnings going negative. 

Any item that impacts net income (or net loss) will impact the retained earnings. Such items include sales revenue, cost of goods sold (COGS), depreciation, and necessary operating expenses.

Are Retained Earnings a Type of Equity?

Retained earnings are a type of equity and are therefore reported in the shareholders’ equity section of the balance sheet. Although retained earnings are not themselves an asset, they can be used to purchase assets such as inventory, equipment, or other investments. Therefore, a company with a large retained earnings balance may be well-positioned to purchase new assets in the future or offer increased dividend payments to its shareholders.

What Does Negative Retained Earnings Mean?

Generally speaking, a company with a negative retained earnings balance would signal weakness because it indicates that the company has experienced losses in one or more previous years. However, it is more difficult to interpret a company with high retained earnings.

What Does It Mean for a Company to Have High Retained Earnings?

On one hand, high retained earnings could indicate financial strength since it demonstrates a track record of profitability in previous years. On the other hand, it could be indicative of a company that should consider paying more dividends to its shareholders. This, of course, depends on whether the company has been pursuing profitable growth opportunities.

Where Is Retained Earnings on a Balance Sheet?

Retained earnings can typically be found on a company’s balance sheet in the shareholders’ equity section. Retained earnings are calculated through taking the beginning-period retained earnings, adding to the net income (or loss), and subtracting dividend payouts.

Are Retained Earnings the Same as Profits?

The main difference between retained earnings and profits is that retained earnings subtract dividend payments from a company’s profit, whereas profits do not. Where profits may indicate that a company has positive net income, retained earnings may show that a company has a net loss depending on the amount of dividends it paid out to shareholders.

The Bottom Line

Retained earnings represent the profit a company has saved over time and therefore the portion that can be used to reinvest in the business (in new equipment, R&D, or marketing, among others) or distributed to shareholders. They are a measure of a company's financial health and they can promote stability and growth.

Article Sources
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  5. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Apple, Inc., Form 10-K, For the Fiscal Year Ended September 26, 2020." Page 19.

  6. Apple Investor Relations. "Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations (Unaudited): Q3, FY2019." Page 2.

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