Let's Be Balanced with Pro Forma Earnings.

AuthorLivingston, Phil
PositionBrief Article

Pro forma earnings can be analytically useful in describing company performance. Historically, the major use of pro forma results was to more comparably present two periods after there had been a major acquisition or refinancing. But over the last few years, the practice has been abused at the edges and is coming under increasing criticism from the press and regulators. The SEC's chief accountant calls it "earnings before bad stuff." The Washington Post reported that it looked up "pro forma" in the dictionary and found "hypothetical." The Post then suggested a change of all labels to "hypothetical earnings."

I think some companies got on a slippery slope in presenting pro forma results. Originally well-intentioned and encouraged by an analyst community interested in recurring earnings before unusual items like restructuring charges, the practice has drifted into a more confusing state. Today, pro forma earnings have widely different communication objectives.

Some companies are trying to present earnings before one-time, unusual items. Other companies are trying to present a form of cash-based earnings. The differing practices and objectives are clearly confusing the less sophisticated reader (you are welcome to read "media" into this sentence), but helping the large fund managers and analysts. Companies usually construct the pro forma calculation based on many, many questions from key thought leaders in their investor base.

For all these reasons, FEI got it right when...

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