Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) represents the direct costs incurred to manufacture a product or deliver a service. These costs vary with production or sales volume and exclude indirect operating expenses such as marketing, administration, and finance costs.
Gross Profit = Revenue − COGS
Gross Margin = Gross Profit / Revenue
Gross Profit is arguably the most important measure of operating profitability, as it reflects the economics of the company’s core business before indirect operating expenses.
Components of COGS
- Direct Material Costs
- Direct Labor Costs
- Manufacturing / Conversion Costs
- Inventory Adjustments:
- COGS = Opening Inventory + Purchases − Closing Inventory
(A higher closing inventory reduces current-period COGS, while inventory write-downs increase it.)
- COGS = Opening Inventory + Purchases − Closing Inventory
What Drives COGS?
- Input Costs
- Raw Materials
- Labour
- Energy
- Operational Efficiency
- Manufacturing Efficiency
- Capacity Utilisation
- Competitive Position
- Supplier Bargaining Power
- Backward Integration
- Product Pricing
- Operating Leverage
- Business Mix
- Product Mix
- Foreign Exchange
Red Flags
- Gross margins declining despite stable raw material prices
- Inventory growing much faster than sales
- Sharp increase in inventory write-downs
- Declining capacity utilisation despite stable demand.
- Frequent changes in inventory valuation methods
- Gross margins consistently exceeding peers without a clear competitive advantage.
COGS Analysis Checklist
- Margins – Is Gross Margin expanding or contracting?
- Is margin expansion due to lower material costs or structural cost advantage?
- Costs – Are raw material costs increasing?
- Pricing – Is pricing offsetting higher input costs?
- Efficiency – Is capacity utilization improving?
- Inventory
- Is product mix shifting toward higher-margin products?
- Is inventory turnover improving?
- Competitive Advantage – Does the company have procurement advantages or economies of scale?
Key Takeaways
- Lower COGS leads to higher Gross Profit, all else being equal.
- Gross Margin should always be analyzed alongside Asset Turnover and ROCE.
- High Gross Margins do not necessarily imply a superior business—capital-intensive businesses may still generate poor returns.
- Businesses with high inventory turnover and asset turnover (e.g., retailers and distributors) can generate attractive returns despite relatively low Gross Margins.
- Ultimately, Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) is driven by both operating margins and capital efficiency.
- Sustainable Gross Margin expansion is typically driven by pricing power, backward integration, cost efficiencies, favourable product mix, or procurement advantages.
- What Gross Margins Reveal About a Business:
- High Gross Margin →
- Pricing power
- Backward Integration
- Brand
- Differentiation
- Low Gross Margin + High Asset Turnover →
- Economies of Scale
- Distribution
- Operational Efficiency.
- Low Gross Margin + Low Asset Turnover →
- Weak Unit Economics.
- High Gross Margin →
- Gross Margin expansion driven by lower raw material costs is often cyclical, whereas expansion driven by pricing power or structural cost advantages is generally more sustainable.