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Earnings
(redirected from Company Earnings)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal 0.01 sec.
Earnings
Net income for the company during a period.

Earnings
A company's total revenue less its operating expenses, interest paid, depreciation, and taxes. For example, suppose a widget manufacturer makes $1,000,000 in total revenue. The widgets cost $200,000 to make and his administrative and payroll expenses total $250,000. He also must subtract $50,000 in depreciation on his widget manufacturing equipment and pay $200,000 in taxes. His earnings are stated as: $1,000,000 - $200,000 - $250,000 - $50,000 - $200,000 = $300,000.

earnings
The income of a business. Earnings usually refers to aftertax income but may occasionally be used synonymously with pretax income or even revenues.

Earnings. Corporate earnings are a company's profits after expenses have been paid. Earnings history is one of the key indicators that fundamental analysts use to evaluate a company.

However, there are several ways to report earnings. The broadest is reported earnings, which is defined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). Others include pro forma earnings, EBITDA, free cash flow, and core earnings. Each method produces different results because of the data that is included in the calculation.

The variations make it difficult to make meaningful comparisons among the earnings of different companies, an issue that Standard & Poor's was addressing in developing the concept of core earnings.

Your earnings, on the other hand, include salary and other compensation for work you do, as well as income from assets you own, such as interest, dividends, and capital gains.


Earnings

What Does Earnings Mean?

The amount of profit a company produces during a specific period; usually presented on a quarterly (three calendar months) or annual basis. Earnings typically refers to after-tax net income. Ultimately, a business's earnings are the main determinant of its share price, because earnings and the circumstances relating to them can indicate whether the business will be profitable and successful in the long run.

Investopedia explains Earnings

Earnings are perhaps the single most studied number in a company's financial statements because earnings reveal a company's profitability. A business's quarterly and annual earnings typically are compared with the company's and analysts' estimates. In most cases, when earnings do not meet either of those estimates, the company's stock price will drop. In contrast, when they beat estimates, the share price can surge.

Related Terms:
Balance Sheet
Earnings before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and AmortizationEBITDA
Earnings per ShareEPS
Net IncomeNI
Pro Forma



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Further helped by companies'' ongoing cost-cutting programmes, we believe company earnings could double within the next 12 months.
Full-Text Search Capabilities Add Powerful New Dimension to Earnings Calls While the availability of company earnings conference calls in podcast format greatly enhances access to, and usability of, the calls, the full-text search capabilities at REITcafe.
the worsening employment situation and deteriorating company earnings as worrying factors for an economic recovery.
 
 
 
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