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    Elige lengua
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    Usar "net income" en una oración

    net income oraciones de ejemplo

    net income


    1. Al of those measures help cash flows, but they don’t do a thing for net income


    2. For its 1991 fiscal year, the company reported net income of $11


    3. Of course, we provide you with one of the best squeeze pages around for you to use in Inet Incomes


    4. The average net income for an independent private practitioner who owned all or part of his or her practice in 2007 was $205,960 for a general practitioner and $353,280 for a specialist


    5. generated, and stems from the variation in net income from the decision to use debt


    6. ∆ Net Income / % ∆ Operating Income (EBIT) because it best expresses the conceptual


    7. Operating Income / % ∆ Sales) x (% ∆ Net Income / % ∆ Operating Income), which conveniently becomes (% ∆ Net Income) / (% ∆ Sales) Obviously, the premium for Wall Street is to have as high a level of (% ∆ Net Income) / (% ∆ Sales) - total leverage - as possible without the inherent volatility such a level implies


    8. The volatility of net income is a natural outgrowth of its dependence on both


    9. and changing interest will increase the volatility of changes in net income


    10. taxes are held constant, the variability of net income remains constant as well

    11. In effect, net income that is normally derived from the deduction of interest and taxes from operating income, is


    12. Net income may not vary more than it does without debt, but limiting the


    13. However, if we proceed to observe the four separate changes in net income for each flow, we find that


    14. The net income calculation is 140-20 = 120, and 120 x


    15. Conceptually, more net income can arise from more leverage or greater sales, but the


    16. financial leverage as a strategic tool to increase net income


    17. production problems limit the amount of net income - a problem that is not part of the


    18. Stability of net income


    19. the potential amount and variability of earnings per share because net income and market price are not diluted by more shares outstanding


    20. The second approach was the “net income” method, which proclaimed that a firm’s value

    21. On the other hand, the net income approach to valuing a firm’s stock


    22. However, the net income approach assumes that there is no risk; all increases in EPS are


    23. In the net income method, the value of the stock is calculated


    24. of capital, there is no difference between the two methods; indeed the net income method


    25. margin (Net Income/ Sales) by asset turnover (Sales / Assets)


    26. debt will affect interest expense which will affect the amount of taxes, and ultimately - net income


    27. between net income and stock price is obfuscated by extrapolation


    28. earnings, both variables, net income and equity, need to be calibrated within the same


    29. the present value of future earnings, there is a net income factor in each stock price change


    30. the market) / Variance of the Return on the Market = ROE x COV(% ∆ Net Income, R

    31. yield the change in net income: (% ∆ Sales) x (%∆ Net Income / % ∆ EBIT) x (% ∆ EBIT /


    32. % ∆ Sales) = (%∆ Net Income) In a stable company with controllable leverage, this change in net income was derived from using total leverage as a predictive tool


    33. We can substitute this expression for the change in net income in the original


    34. To obtain this expression, we reasoned that % ∆ Sales is equal to (Sales(c)) / (Sales(p)) - 1, and when multiplied by the ROE constant, Net Income(p) /


    35. the return on a stock can be decomposed into a return on equity and a series of net income


    36. it assumes that a stock is worth its intrinsic value in net income relative to the amount of


    37. components, both ROE and the increase in net income have greater long-run correlation


    38. 1) ∆ Net Income and its standard deviation


    39. The reader should observe that the cost of equity is related to the changes in net income


    40. other risks and when compared to actual net income, adds a different dimension to that

    41. statement-profitability of net income, with the theoretical risk factors of the cost of equity


    42. return is counterpoised with the amount of net income


    43. Since the stock price will tend to mirror ROE over the long-run, making beta a deterministic function of net income and


    44. shares outstanding by the dividend, and then subtracting that figure from net income: (300


    45. student/investor should notice that had net income been greater, the extra capital could


    46. as well because the increase in net income would have lowered the probability of


    47. equation becomes: Net Income - [(Cost of Equity) x (Stockholder’s Equity)]


    48. advantages of deducted interest expense become implicit in net income, and the investor


    49. In the above example, net income is derived as ((145) - (16)] x (0


    50. between net income growth and the cost of equity: net income should actually decrease the














































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