An earnings recast is a revision of previous earnings reports, in which a company has made different choices with their accounting methodology that they feel are a better representation of their accounts. A common time to do this is after a company has divested itself of a subsidiary, when it will publish recast financial statements from the preceding years that show the company’s performance without the subsidiary being included. Continue reading...
Basically synonymous with Normalized EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA is a non-GAAP method of making earnings valuations a little more standardized between companies. Adjusted Earnings is a valuation that has many moving parts in the form of the interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization that might be included there, in addition to the non-GAAP nature of the methods. EBITDA removes all of those moving parts and looks at the Earnings before any of the other arithmetic interferes, hence the name Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. Continue reading...
Accelerated amortization is the recalculation of an amortization schedule, such as mortgage payments, after the borrower pays off some of the debt ahead of schedule. Amortization describes the accounting practice of giving a one-time expense a retirement schedule or payment plan by which it is to be either deducted for tax purposes, repaid, or paid out. Accelerated amortizations allow for more payments or deductions in the early years rather than later years. Continue reading...
An accurate historical return calculation for an investment should be done with the dividends in mind, such as assuming all dividends were reinvested, which is the most common way they are used. Accurate historical information concerning prices and return should take the stock splits, dividends, and so-on into account. In a lesser-known context, dividend adjustment means a payment of accrued but yet-unpaid dividend amounts to the bearer of convertible preferred stock at the time that he or she converts them to shares of common stock. Continue reading...
A mortgage whose rate is variably adjusted according to the interest rate environment is known as an ARM. With an adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) , the interest rate is lower at the beginning than the fixed-rate alternative, but the customer bears the risk of interest rates going up in the future. The bank or institution creating such a product will usually peg the rate to a specific index or benchmark rate, and will also probably give the customer a cap at which rate hikes would stop. Continue reading...
For tax purposes, Adjusted Gross Income is the basis of an individual’s income tax calculations, before “below the line” deductions. Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) is Gross Income (all of an individual’s earnings for the year) minus above-the-line deductions such as retirement plan contributions, education and medical expenses, Health Savings Accounts, alimony, military exemptions, and so on. After these adjustments, a person can take the standard federal deduction or itemize their other deductions. These are known as below-the-line deductions. Continue reading...
The Sept 22–25, 2025 earnings season features reports from aerospace, tech, retail, and services leaders like FLY, MU, COST, and ACN Stock Analysis, offering investors key insights into corporate resilience amid Fed rate cuts and a moderating U.S. economy. Continue reading...
As Q3 2025 earnings season kicks off, companies from Carnival to Nike reveal how they’re navigating inflation, rate cuts, and shifting demand. With tech, travel, retail, and EVs in focus, these results offer critical insights for investors in a volatile market. Continue reading...
August 21–22 earnings will test corporate resilience as Walmart, Alibaba, Intuit, and others report amid tariffs, inflation, and shifting consumer demand. Investors will gain vital insights into how retail, tech, and resources adapt in a volatile global economy. Continue reading...
The Sept 15–18 earnings week brings PLAY, MANU, LEN, GIS, FDX and more into focus as investors brace for a Fed rate cut, rising inflation, and shifting demand trends. Continue reading...
Earnings week kicks off September 8–11 with ORCL, ADBE, GME, CHWY, KR, and more. Get Stock Analysis across tech, retail, defense, and infrastructure as markets weigh AI growth, Fed cuts, and corporate resilience. Continue reading...
As markets enter Q4 2025 amid inflation pressures and government shutdown uncertainty, major companies across sectors prepare to report earnings. From consumer staples to tech and aerospace, these results will reveal how corporations are adapting to a fragile yet resilient global economy. Continue reading...
As Q2 2025 earnings season peaks on July 28–29, major companies across tech, industrials, healthcare, and consumer sectors reveal their performance amid inflation pressures and economic uncertainty. This article highlights key results and investment takeaways. Continue reading...
Major companies across tech, retail, finance, and industrials report Q1 2025 earnings from May 26–28, offering critical insights into how corporations are navigating inflation, trade tensions, and economic uncertainty. Here's what investors need to watch. Continue reading...
The October 20–21, 2025 earnings week will test corporate resilience across major sectors—from defense and biotech to streaming and autos. As global growth slows to 3.2%, investors will gain crucial insights into pricing power, margins, and strategic adaptation amid economic uncertainty. Continue reading...
Q2 2025 earnings close with strong S&P 500 growth, Fed rate cut signals, and key Stock Analysis on tech, retail, and industrials. Continue reading...
Mid-August earnings spotlight a high-stakes mix of AI innovators, global cyclicals, and emerging-market leaders, offering key insights into inflation pressures, capital investment risks, and the resilience of 2025’s market rally. Continue reading...
The October 22–24, 2025 earnings week unfolds amid renewed U.S.-China tensions, a government shutdown, and stubborn inflation. With AI-driven spending soaring and valuations stretched, investors will watch key reports from Tesla, IBM, Intel, and P&G for clues to market resilience. Continue reading...
If you are eligible to make Roth IRA contributions, you can fund an account for yourself and a non-working spouse, up to the contribution limits. As of 2016, if you are under 50 years old, you are allowed to contribute $5,500 a year to your Roth IRA. If you have a spouse, even if he or she does not work, you can make contributions into an account for him or her, up to the full limit. For two people, that means $11,000 a year can be set aside each year. Continue reading...
Adjusted Earnings are also known as pro forma, non-GAAP earnings, and are usually met with some cynicism. Non-GAAP methods of accounting for earnings are something that is not allowed to be used to mislead investors, according to SEC rules. GAAP stands for Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, and they represent the standards and SEC rulebook for a publicly-traded company’s accounting. There are times when it makes sense to use adjusted earnings instead of GAAP earnings because adjusted earnings will ignore non-recurring one-time expenses so that analysts can compare company performance in other areas without being distracted by a large one-time expense. Continue reading...