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What is Diluted Earnings Per Share?

If all the convertible securities a company had issued were converted at once to common stock, the stock would be diluted; Diluted EPS reveals by how much. Companies will sometimes entice investors to buy bonds or preferred stock by giving them an option to convert them into shares of common stock. If a bond is converted, shareholders equity increases on the balance sheet and liabilities go down, since a debt liability is being retired. Continue reading...

What are Fully Diluted Shares?

Fully Diluted Shares are a calculation used to show how much the existing shares of common stock could potentially be diluted if all the convertible securities and employee stock options, were exercised. Fully Diluted Shares is a calculation used to show the potential number of shares that could hypothetically be called into existence instantaneously by the holders of convertible securities, warrants, employee stock options and so forth. Continue reading...

What is a Secondary Offering?

A secondary offering is the sale of a large block of previously-issued, privately-held stock, which actually requires registration with the SEC, but does not raise capital for the company which issued the shares originally. A secondary offering is a non-dilutive sale of existing shares which were previously held by one, or a few, investors. The proceeds of the sale go to the sellers of the shares and not to the company which issued the shares. Continue reading...

What is Dilution?

Dilution is the disassociation of value from current common stock shares due to the issuance or conversion of additional shares of the same company into the market, causing value to be reallocated. If a company issues a follow-on (aka Secondary) issue of shares, or if many holders of convertible shares decide to use their conversion privilege, the share price will be diluted. Each share’s value will decrease because there are now an increased number of shares dividing up the same amount of earnings that the company generates. Continue reading...

What is Dividend Per Share?

Dividend payments are allocated on a per-share basis. The company issuing them may announce the dividend in terms of the dollar value, but investors and analytical services will translate that into a percentage yield. When calculating the dividend from a company perspective, the total dividend amount that they are comfortable declaring is divided by the number of outstanding shares. The dividend per share is an important number, and the growth of this number is the dividend growth rate. Continue reading...

What is an Accelerated Share Repurchase?

An Accelerated Share Repurchase (ASR) is a method by which companies can buy back a significant amount of their outstanding shares with the help of an investment bank. By enlisting the help of an investment bank to accelerate a buy-back, a company can cleanly retire a large bulk of shares at once. These agreements have come into use in the last 10 years, and there is of course some variation in their composition. They fall under a category of buybacks known as structured buybacks. Continue reading...

What are Earnings per Share (EPS)?

EPS is derived by taking the net income of a company and dividing it by the share price. That gives an individual investor an idea of how much growth was captured by their shares. Earnings per share is one of the main articles that is announced by the quarterly reports given by companies to their investors. Earnings per share does not mean that each share has appreciated a certain amount, but if the quarterly reports in earnings seasons stir up demand for the shares based on solid fundamentals at a company, it can result in a higher price per share. Continue reading...

What is a Multiple?

A multiple is a measure of a stock’s value, calculated by comparing one metric to another. The most common is the metric comparing a stock’s price to its earnings. The most commonly used ‘multiple’ calculation is price to earnings, or P/E. This tells you the price of stock relative to its earnings per share. P/E’s are most useful when comparing stocks in the same industry or sector. For instance, a P/E of 25x may seem high to most, but it’s actually quite normal for stocks in the technology sector. Continue reading...

What does 'Outstanding Shares' mean?

Outstanding shares refers to all of the shares of company held in total, which includes all ownership - retail investors, institutional, the company’s officers, insiders, and so on. Outstanding shares are listed on the balance sheet under “Capital Stock,” and are used in calculating market capitalization, earnings per share, and other critical per share calculations. The amount of outstanding shares can fluctuate over time on the basis of corporate actions, such as share buybacks (reduces overall count) or new share issuance (increases overall count). Continue reading...

What is a Buyback?

When a company decides to use excess cash to purchase its own shares from the market, it is called a buyback or “share repurchase program.” There are only so many things a company can do with earnings in excess of their projections; among these are issuing a dividend, paying off debts, expanding, acquiring another company, or buying back shares of its own stock. Buybacks are also known as Stock Repurchase Agreements. There may be guidelines in state law or the company’s contracts or buy laws that determine what options they have and how many shares can be repurchased. Continue reading...

What are Corporate Earnings?

Earnings are the net revenue of a company after expenses and, sometimes, taxes. Also known as profit. Corporate earnings are an important metric for individual companies and the economy as a whole, because it shows how much money has been made. Revenue is the inflow of money to a company, and earnings are the net revenue, or profit, after expenses have been taken out. Of course there is also EBITDA, which is Earnings Before Interest Taxes Depreciation and Amortization, but this is a non-GAAP method. Earnings are usually calculated on a quarterly basis. Continue reading...

What are Accounting Earnings?

Earnings that are reported in a given year may differ for the same company if different accounting methods were used. Earnings are the revenues of the company minus the cost of good sold, expenses, and investment losses. If that seems like something that’s pretty cut-and-dried, and will look the same no matter who is doing the accounting… well, that’s not entirely correct. Earnings can be made to look different if different non-GAAP or pro-forma methods are used. If non-recurring expenses are ignored or amortized in a pro-forma accounting method, then earnings will not match up to the GAAP-based books. Continue reading...

B, MNDY, OKLO, ASTS, AMC, VRNA, ACHR, BBAI, SE, CRWV, CAVA, TME, RGTI, HRB, CRCL | Q2 2025 Earnings Preview: August 11-12, 2025

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...

PLAY, CTLP, FERG, ADMLF, GIS, MANU, FDX, LEN, DRI, FDS | Q2 2025 Earnings Preview: September 15-18, 2025

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...

WELL, CDNS, WM, NXPI, CLS, NUE, V, UNH, NVS, HSBC, NEE, BKNG, AMT, RCL, GLW, STX | Q3 2025 Earnings Preview: October 27-28, 2025

As Q4 2025 unfolds, the October 27–28 earnings week delivers critical insights into how major companies—from healthcare and AI tech to energy, banking, and travel—are adapting to slowing job growth, persistent inflation, and the Fed’s recent rate cuts amid 3.8% U.S. GDP growth. Continue reading...

FLY, MU, AZO, AIR, CTAS, KBH, FUL, COST, ACN, JBL, KMX, CNXC | Q2 2025 Earnings Preview: September 22-25, 2025

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...

WRB, STLD, SMMT, NFLX, GE, KO, PM, RTX, TXN, LMT, NOC, MMM, GM, NDAQ | Q3 2025 Earnings Preview: October 20-21, 2025

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...

What does Earnings mean?

Earnings is another word for the net income of a company. It is one of the most important numbers in corporate finance. If a company cannot show earnings, and growth in earnings, investors aren’t going to stick around. Earnings are normally computed as revenue minus taxes and expenses. It is synonymous with net income. Earnings is a positive cash outlay for the year, which means the company is not operating at a deficit. Continue reading...

CCL, JEF, MTN, PRGS, NKE, PAYX, LW, RPM, AYI, CAG, NG, VFS | Q2 2025 Earnings Preview: September 29 – October 2, 2025

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...

CRWV, OXY, ASTS, RKLB, RGTI, SONY, SE, NBIS, OKLO, CSCO, TDG, CRCL, DIS, AMAT, BN, NU, BABA, MUFG | Q3 2025 Earnings Preview: November 10-14, 2025

As markets face economic uncertainty and an AI-driven transformation, the week of November 10–14, 2025, will test investor confidence. With limited U.S. data, softening labor trends, and key earnings from tech, energy, and finance, investors look to AI infrastructure as a guiding force for Q4 strategy. Continue reading...