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Pro forma

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A pro forma (sometimes written proforma) is a document or statement provided in advance of an actual transaction that serves as a model for the actual documents of the transaction.

Business uses of the phrase pro forma

In business, pro forma is used in different ways.

Accounting

A practice (controversial with some) of some publicly traded company is to report earnings in two ways: "actual," which refers to the earnings calculated according to Generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP") and "pro forma," which is a statement of the company's financial activities while excluding "unusual and nonrecurring transactions" (unusual and nonrecurring expenses) when stating how much money the company actually made. Expenses often excluded from pro forma results include company restructuring costs, a decline in the value of the company's investments, or other accounting charges, such as adjusting the current balance sheet to fix faulty accounting practices in previous years. Companies that report a pro forma income statement or balance sheet usually do so because, they say, the unusual events being excluded really were unusual, so the GAAP financial reports required by law are misleading to investors and potential investors. The crisis that happened this last quarter is not going to recur in future quarters, so the pro forma results can be used by investors to forecast what a "regular" quarter might portend in the future. Critics note that pro forma numbers always look more profitable than GAAP numbers, and state that many companies intentionally use pro forma results in order to mislead investors into believing the company is in much better financial shape than it is; that there is no defined meaning or accounting standard for "pro forma" and that it is therefore impossible to make an "apples to apples" comparison between companies with pro forma results in the way that GAAP accounting allows; and that most "unusual events" reported as such are part of the ordinary course of business and should be reported as such. Most companies in most capitalist countries restructure themselves often, for example, so, it is argued, it is dishonest to claim that restructuring charges are unusual, one-time events that investors should not anticipate in the future.

Business planning

In a business plan, the projections of future revenues and expenses is sometimes referred to the "pro forma."

See also

Accounting

Source

Wikipedia: Pro forma