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Topics Covered
- Financial vs. operational leverage
- Balance sheet
- Income statement
- Breakeven points
Talk Citation
McDonald, M. (2023, November 30). Tesla: understanding operational leverage [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 27, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/NRDU9646.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Extended-form Case Study
Tesla: understanding operational leverage
Published on November 30, 2023
10 min
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Today, we're going to talk about
Tesla and understanding
operational leverage.
I'm Professor Michael McDonald.
I'm a Professor of Finance at
Fairfield University in
Fairfield, Connecticut,
in the United States and
I'd like to help you
understand one of the more
enigmatic companies and
how they've gained
so much success over
the last few years. So,
that's what we're going to be
talking about today with Tesla.
Let's get started. Now, when
0:28
we talk about
leverage in finance,
we're often referring to
financial leverage and
financial leverage
simply refers to the use of debt
in order to lever up
returns to equity,
but of course, as
you might expect,
leveraging up your use of debt
also levers up your risk.
Now, leverage can
come in many forms
broadly it's any
aspect of a business
or a small change can have
a big impact, like the
name "lever" implies.
0:59
What we are interested in
Tesla's case is not
financial leverage,
but instead,
operational leverage.
Operating leverage
measures how effectively
a firm can increase their
operating income by increasing
revenue and operating
leverage (OL) is
a function of the firm's
cost structure and
the mix of fixed
vs. variable costs.
1:25
Operating leverage is used to
calculate a company's
break-even point and help
set appropriate selling
prices to cover
all of their costs and
generate a profit.
The basic idea is
that if a firm has
more fixed cost and
less variable cost,
then as the number of
units they sell increases,
their operating margin
should go up considerably.
Companies with high
operating leverage
have to cover a larger amount of
fixed costs every month
regardless of whether they
sell any units of product.
Essentially, you've got a
higher break-even point, but
as you add additional
incremental sales
over and above that
break-even point,
every incremental dollar
contains more profit.
Your gross margins are higher.
Low-operating-leverage
companies may have high costs,
vary directly with their sales,
but they have lower fixed
costs to cover each month.
You can think about
different industries and
different types of
firms that would
fall into each category.
For example, think about
something like a
software company,
do you think they're a high
operating leverage firm
or a low operating
leverage firm?
How would that compare to
something like, for instance,
a trucking company, say moving
products or freight down
the road in a truck.
Would they be a high
operating leverage firm
or a low operating
leverage firm?
Well, in the case of
the software company,
they don't really
have any per unit
variable costs for
the most part.
They've got a lot
of fixed costs to
develop that software upfront,
but they don't have much in
the way of variable costs,
whether they sell 1000 software
licenses or 1 million, largely
their fixed costs are
going to be the same and
their variable
costs are going to
be pretty minimal for
each additional unit.
In contrast, for a
trucking company,
well, every time we send
that truck out on the road,
we have incremental
additional cost,
There's the cost for a
driver to drive that truck,
there's the cost for gasoline,
for insurance and
everything else.
The truck itself
is a fixed cost,
but we're going to
have relatively
high variable costs
that go along with it,
and hence, low
operating leverage.
Now the operating leverage
formula is what you see here.