How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (2024)

Table of Contents
What Are Lost Profits and How Are They Calculated? What Steps Do Forensic Accountants Take to Determine Lost Profits? Background Information Determine the Time Period that Sales Were Affected Determine the Net Sales Value Lost Determine Saved Expenses Determine the Potential for Other Saved Expenses Consider Actual Results In Closing… Authors Services Relevant Articles Benefits of Hindsight when Quantifying Financial Losses Lost Profits Measurement in the Cannabis Industry Claim Considerations Related to the Beirut Port Explosion – Part 2 Claim Considerations Related to the Beirut Port Explosion – Part 1 How to Calculate Losses Under Business Interruption Coverage Forensic Accounting Liability Exposures Economic Damages from Personal Injury: A Forensic Accountant’s Perspective Caribbean ‘vacation’ for CAT claims Mining Claim – All Is Not As It Appears Identifying and Measuring Short Duration Business Interruption Losses Contaminated Products Insurance Claims: How to Check the Costs of a Product Recall Business Interruption: Complex Interdependencies Catastrophe Events and Business Interruption Insurance A Primer To Accurately Calculating Lost Profits I Lost My Customers and It’s Your Fault! Foreign Exchange Issues in Damage Quantification: Part II – Applying the Concepts Foreign Exchange Issues in Damage Quantification: Part I – Basic Concepts Adding up the Damage: Lost Profits vs. Business Value Court Breaks with Apportionment Calculated Risk: A $75M Award Adds Urgency to Pre-Judgment Interest Considerations Top 10 Most Common Errors in Damage Quantification – #2: “Build It and He Will Come” Pre-Judgment Interest, Part III: Property Damage, Profit, and PJI Pre-Judgment Interest, Part II – Interest and Taxes Pre-Judgment Interest: Part I: Establishing a Rate – A Basic Framework Pre-Judgment Interest: Introduction Top 10 Most Common Errors in Damages Calculations – #1: Failure to Consider Saved Expenses Tax Rates, Timing and Damages Dunkin’ Donuts c. Berticoinc, Part I: The Benchmark Approach to Lost Profits Agricultural Loss – Quantifying Economic Damage for a Hog Farm Business Interruption Loss – The Interaction between Inventory Losses and Business Interruption Claims A New Take on the Accounting of Profits Remedy Quantifying Business Loss Involving Expropriation of Newly Established Businesses Documentation and Litigation Coinsurance: Can Someone Please Explain This to me Once And For All? Handling Large Complex Claims Projecting Sales in Business Income Losses is an Art – Not Necessarily a Science The Impact of Foreign Exchange Rate Movements on Loss of Profit Claims
  • How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (1)15 December, 2015
  • How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (2)Kent Bogdan
  • How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (3)USA

What Are Lost Profits and How Are They Calculated?

How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (4)

Lost profits are economic damages caused by a disruption in business operations. The damages can be the result of a variety of factors, some of which include patent infringement, breach of contract, liability caused by an accident, negligent acts or physical damage to business property or equipment.

The need to quantify economic damages for the purposes of determining lost profits with reasonable certainty is a necessity for any case that seeks retribution against an offending party.

Calculating lost profits is essentially performing a “but for” estimate of how the business would have performed had there been no incident. The actual results of the period that the business was affected are subtracted from the “but for” results. The difference is the loss or damage suffered by the business as a result of the incident. It is important to obtain a good understanding of the income and expense statements before, during and in some cases, after the loss period in order to properly quantify the lost profits.

Every case is unique and the steps required in calculating the damages depends on the specific facts of each individual case.

What Steps Do Forensic Accountants Take to Determine Lost Profits?

Background Information

Gain an understanding of the business through interviewing owners or employees of the affected business and / or through independent research. Seasonality, customer trends, area economic trends and competition all factor into the “but for” sales projections. For manufacturing losses, production capacities and inventory levels play an important role in determining the damages suffered by the injured party.

Determine the Time Period that Sales Were Affected

Depending on the type of loss, the time period during which the injured party was affected could be the remaining time left on a contract, how long a patent has been infringed upon or the time it takes to repair or replace damaged equipment or buildings.

Determine the Net Sales Value Lost

Once the affected time period has been established, one must calculate the gross sales value of the lost goods or services being offered by the offended party. Gross sales value is the price a customer would have paid for the goods or services to the injured party. Certain expenses must be deducted from the gross sales to determine the net sales value lost. Examples of these expenses would be the costs normally incurred for packaging, delivery charges, volume discounts and other sales incentives or discounts.

Determine Saved Expenses

This step involves determining the cost the injured party would have incurred to sell the goods in step three. For example, if the injured party owned a restaurant that was shut down for a period of time, the closed restaurant would not need to buy food to serve its customers while it was closed. This is an example of a saved or variable cost that would then be deducted from the net sales value determined in step three. These expenses are commonly referred to as cost of goods sold and represent raw materials or purchased goods that are a direct cost of making a sale.

Determine the Potential for Other Saved Expenses

Finally, one must consider other general expenses to determine if there are additional saved costs that may not have been incurred as a result of the loss. Examples of these costs include sales commissions, management or royalty fees that are charged based on a percentage of revenue, payroll costs and rents or utilities. It is not uncommon to consider an expense as saved in one case but not saved in another case, depending on the specific case background. These additional expenses would serve to further reduce the amount of the losses suffered by the insured.

Consider Actual Results

If the injured party is able to partially operate during the affected period, the resulting actual gross profits earned would serve to reduce the amount of damages. In instances such as these, a careful analysis of the actual results is necessary to identify extra costs or non-loss-related entries that may have been recorded in the profit and loss statements.

Actual results would not reduce damages in cases when there is a specific contract quantity in question or an intellectual property case where a claim of incremental lost sales or specific identifiable sales is being alleged.

In Closing…

Lost profits occur when there is a disruption in normal operations or there is a dispute about a contract or intellectual property infringement. To seek retribution, one must quantify the lost profit damages. A qualified forensic accountant can provide the expertise necessary to quantify the lost profits with reasonable certainty.

The statements or comments contained within this article are based on the author’s own knowledge and experience and do not necessarily represent those of the firm, other partners, our clients, or other business partners.

Authors

How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (5)

Kent Bogdan

CPA, MAFF, Partner

  • +1 972.235.9547
  • kbogdan@mdd.com
  • Dallas, TX, USA

Services

  • Lost Profits

How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (6)

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How Do Forensic Accountants Calculate Lost Profits (2024)
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