# `DuPont Model
Summary::
# Notes
## Links
Posted::[[Business Finance]]
## Backlinks
> [!Info]- Ignore dataview
>## Backlink
>Ignore this dataview. Plugins don't work on the website
>```dataview
Table Status, type as "Type"
from [[]] and !outgoing([[]])
sort file.name asc
>```
---
# References
     ![Machine generated alternative text:This gives many managers and advisers a justification not to give their financial records anything more than a passing glance. This is unfortunate. A good financial performance analysis should do more than inform about how a farm performed in the past. More important, it should provide the manager and adviser with insight regarding how to prioritize activities that will enable the farm to improve its financial performance. The DuPont system has disadvantages as does any financial analysis system. However, its advantage beyond simplicity of use is that it takes into account the major levers of firm profitability – efficiency, asset use, and debt leverage. Anatomy of Profits Before describing the DuPont system, consider the anatomy of profits. The accounting equation is: Total Assets = Total Debt + Total Owner Equity As the accounting equation shows every penny of assets comes from one of two sources – that financed by debt (borrowed capital) and that financed by equity (the owner’s own money). Assets can also be described by those that are capital assets versus short-term inventory or market assets. Capital assets are longer-term investments (land, machinery, breeding stock, etc.) that are not sold themselves to make profits, but are put to work to produce marketable inventory that can be sold for profits (feeder cattle, eggs, etc.). Inventory also includes inputs such as feed, seed, and fertilizer. Businesses earn profits by mixing their labor and management with inputs and capital assets to produce goods for sale. The DuPont system recognizes this recipe for profit-making and segregates it into three distinct components or levers: 1. Earnings (or efficiency), 2. Turnings (effective use of assets), and 3. Leverage (using debt to multiply earnings and equity) In the DuPont system one can drill back into these three levers to determine where profit performance is coming from and potentially determine where management time should be spent for improving profits. Specifically DuPont measures: 1. How efficiently inputs are being used to generate profits [Earnings] 2. How well capital assets are being used to generate gross revenues [Turnings] 3. How well the business is leveraging its debt capital [Leverage] ](DuPont%20Model%2005.png) 