Normalizing EBITDA: Adjustments, One-Time Items, and True Operational Performance

Justin Muscolino Instructor:
Justin Muscolino 
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
10:00 AM PDT | 01:00 PM EDT
60 Minutes
Webinar ID: 503917

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Price Details
Live Webinar
$149 One Attendee
$299 Corporate Live
Recorded Webinar
$199 One Attendee
$399 Corporate Recorded
Combo Offers
Live + Recorded
$299 $348 Live + Recorded
Corporate (Live + Recorded)
$599 $698 Corporate
(Live + Recorded)

Live: One Dial-in One Attendee

Corporate Live: Any number of participants

Recorded: Access recorded version, only for one participant unlimited viewing for 6 months ( Access information will be emailed 24 hours after the completion of live webinar)

Corporate Recorded: Access recorded version, Any number of participants unlimited viewing for 6 months ( Access information will be emailed 24 hours after the completion of live webinar)

Overview:

Normalized or adjusted EBITDA is widely used to represent a company’s "true" operational earnings. In theory, normalization removes unusual or non-recurring items to create a clearer view of sustainable performance. In practice, however, the process of adjustment introduces significant judgment and variability.

This course provides a structured and practical examination of EBITDA normalization-how it works, why it is used, and how to evaluate it responsibly.

We begin by revisiting the foundation of EBITDA and its purpose as a proxy for operating profitability. Participants will review how EBITDA is calculated and why it is commonly used in valuation, lending, and performance benchmarking.

Next, we explore the concept of normalization. Participants will learn the rationale for adjusting EBITDA to remove one-time or extraordinary items, such as restructuring costs, acquisition-related expenses, litigation settlements, or discontinued operations. We will discuss when these adjustments may be appropriate and how they can enhance comparability across periods.

The session then moves into more nuanced territory: recurring adjustments presented as non-recurring. Participants will examine common add-backs, including stock-based compensation, technology investments, integration costs, and management-defined "strategic initiatives." We analyze the risk of repeatedly excluding expenses that are, in substance, part of normal business operations.

We also address pro forma adjustments used in mergers and acquisitions. Participants will learn how projected cost synergies, revenue enhancements, and run-rate assumptions can influence normalized EBITDA-and how to assess the credibility of those projections.

From a governance perspective, the course highlights regulatory and disclosure considerations associated with non-GAAP measures. Participants will understand the importance of transparency, reconciliation to GAAP metrics, and consistency in presentation.

Real-world case scenarios demonstrate how aggressive normalization can distort valuation, inflate covenant capacity, and misrepresent financial health. Participants will learn to identify red flags, such as:

  • Repeated "one-time" restructuring charges
  • Large discretionary add-backs
  • Adjustments that lack clear supporting documentation
  • EBITDA growth driven primarily by exclusions

Finally, the session provides a disciplined review framework. Rather than accepting normalized EBITDA at face value, participants will learn to ask structured questions:
  • Is this adjustment truly non-recurring?
  • Has it appeared in prior periods?
  • Would a reasonable third party consider this operational?
  • Does the adjustment improve transparency-or obscure risk?

By the end of the session, participants will have a practical toolkit to evaluate adjusted EBITDA with confidence and integrity. The objective is not to reject normalization-but to ensure that reported operating performance reflects economic reality.

Why should you Attend:
"Adjusted EBITDA" can sound reassuring. It suggests clarity. It implies that unusual noise has been removed so that stakeholders can see the true performance of the business.

But what if the "adjustments" are doing more than removing noise?

Have you ever reviewed a financial presentation where restructuring charges appeared year after year-yet were still described as “one-time”? Have you seen stock-based compensation excluded entirely, even though it is a recurring cost of attracting talent? Have you questioned whether certain add-backs truly reflect non-operational events-or whether they are masking structural weaknesses?

Because EBITDA is already a non-GAAP metric, normalization introduces another layer of judgment. In acquisition models, debt covenant calculations, investor presentations, and fintech funding rounds, small changes in adjustments can materially increase reported profitability and valuation. Over time, these differences can influence compensation, investment decisions, regulatory scrutiny, and risk exposure.

For compliance professionals, risk managers, internal auditors, and financial oversight teams, misunderstanding EBITDA adjustments can create blind spots. You may rely on overstated performance metrics when evaluating partners or vendors. You may underestimate leverage risk tied to covenant thresholds. You may approve strategic initiatives based on inflated operating assumptions.

This training equips you to move beyond surface-level metrics. You will learn how to evaluate normalization critically, identify recurring "one-time" items, distinguish legitimate adjustments from aggressive accounting, and interpret EBITDA through a disciplined and defensible lens.

If EBITDA influences decision-making in your organization, you must understand not just the number-but how it was built.

Areas Covered in Session:
  • Review of EBITDA fundamentals
  • Purpose and rationale for normalization
  • One-time vs. recurring expense analysis
  • Common EBITDA add-backs and adjustments
  • Evaluating stock-based compensation exclusions
  • Restructuring and integration cost analysis
  • Pro forma adjustments in M&A contexts
  • Regulatory considerations for non-GAAP measures
  • Identifying red flags in adjusted EBITDA presentations
  • Structured framework for evaluating true operational performance

Who Will Benefit:
  • Compliance Professionals
  • Risk Managers
  • Financial Crime and AML Professionals
  • CFOs and Finance Team Members
  • Operations Managers
  • Product Managers
  • Internal Auditors
  • Fintech Partner Managers
  • Vendor Management Teams
  • Analysts and Business Strategists


Speaker Profile
Justin Muscolino brings over 20 years of wide-arranging experience in compliance, training and regulations. He has previously worked in the Head of Compliance Training function for Macquarie Group, UBS, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of China, and GRC Solutions. Justin also runs his own Compliance Training company focusing on US & International regulations.

Justin also worked for FINRA, a US regulator, where he created Examiner University to train examiners on how to perform their function. He also serves as an advisor for the Global Compliance Institute (GCI) and instructs at the Barret School of Business and various compliance training providers.


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