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by arcticbull
2051 days ago
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So there's two kinds of accounting, GAAP and non-GAAP. A great example of non-GAAP accounting was WeWork's "community-adjusted EBITDA." When you use non-GAAP metrics to measure your business, you get to kind of define the standard by which you're measuring yourself. You get to do things exactly like the parent suggested, where you count 100% of the income as revenue and all your incentive spending as "marketing expenses." Uber does this too, for instance (back when it was a thing) 100% of the sticker price of an Uber Pool ride was reported as revenue while only the 30% cut of an UberX or Uber Black was reported as revenue, and yes, they would list driver incentives as marketing expenses. |
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Revenue is a well defined term and you can’t change the term just because you say “non-GAAP”. The SEC would step in because it’s obviously misleading.