Earnings

Earnings
Net income for the company during the period. The New York Times Financial Glossary

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earnings earn‧ings [ˈɜːnɪŋz ǁ ˈɜːr-] noun [plural]
1. FINANCE the money that a person receives for the work they do in a particular period of time:

• He always thought he'd be satisfied even if his earnings didn't reach $20,000 a year.

• the gap between the gross earnings (= income before tax ) of manual and non-manual workers

2. ECONOMICS the total amount that people receive for the work they do in a particular industry or economy in a particular period of time:

• Figures on inflation, industrial production, average earnings (= the average amount that people earn ) and unemployment are expected to show continuing economic weakness.

3. FINANCE ACCOUNTING the profit that a company makes in a particular period of time, or the total profits that companies make in a particular industry or economy in a particular period of time:

• British Airways counts on North Atlantic flights for about half its earnings.

• This year, the steel industry's earnings should be higher with the completion of costly modernization programs.

• Few can match Quality's earnings growth of 40% per year over the past five years.

ˌannual ˈearnings
1. ECONOMICS FINANCE the amount someone earns in a year, or the average amount earned by people in an area or industry in a year:

• Growth in annual earnings in services slowed last year.

2. a company's profits for a particular year:

• General Electric reported annual earnings that make it the most profitable company in the US.

ˌcore ˈearnings ACCOUNTING FINANCE
a company's profit from its main business activities:

• The company did also manage to double its core earnings compared to last year.

reˌtained ˈearnings ACCOUNTING FINANCE
a company's profit for a particular period of time not paid out in dividend S to people owning shares, but put into its reserve S:

• Retained earnings grew last year as per-share earnings of $13.74 far exceeded the $2-a-year dividend rate.

undisˌtributed ˈearnings ACCOUNTING FINANCE
net profit for a particular period of time, or for several periods of time, that is not paid to shareholders in dividend S; = RETAINED PROFIT
4. buy earnings growth FINANCE an investor buys earnings growth by buying shares that are quite cheap in relation to the amount of profit the company made in the previous year, hoping that the value of the shares will increase:

• The company could buy earnings growth for its shareholders by buying ports overseas with its excess capital.

— see also PE ratio

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earnings UK US /ˈɜːnɪŋz/ noun [plural]
FINANCE a company's or industry's profits in a particular period: »

Earnings from record sales topped £5 million.

lower/strong/record earnings »

It was one of the few companies that showed strong earnings.

»

Sun Microsystems reported earnings that were slightly better than the market had been expecting.

»

expected/forecast earnings

HR, WORKPLACE the money that a person makes for the work that they do: »

Family credit is reduced as earnings rise.

»

They are suing each other for loss of earnings.

»

weekly/monthly earnings

See Note INCOME(Cf. ↑income)
See also ANNUAL EARNINGS(Cf. ↑annual earnings), AVERAGE EARNINGS(Cf. ↑average earnings), CORE EARNINGS(Cf. ↑core earnings), HEADLINE EARNINGS(Cf. ↑headline earnings), LOSS OF EARNINGS(Cf. ↑loss of earnings), RETAINED EARNINGS(Cf. ↑retained earnings), ANNUAL EARNINGS(Cf. ↑annual earnings)

Financial and business terms. 2012.

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Synonyms:

Look at other dictionaries:

  • earnings — earn·ings n pl 1: something (as wages or dividends) earned as compensation for labor or the use of capital 2: the balance of revenue for a specified period that remains after deducting related costs and expenses incurred compare profit Merriam… …   Law dictionary

  • earnings — (n.) amount of money one makes (from labor or investment), 1732, from plural of verbal noun earning (O.E. earnung fact of deserving; what one deserves; see EARN (Cf. earn)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • earnings — [n] money for work performed balance, bottom line*, emolument, gain, gate, groceries*, income, in the black*, lucre, net, pay, payoff, piece of the pie*, proceeds, profit, receipts, remuneration, return, revenue, reward, salary, salt*, stipend,… …   New thesaurus

  • earnings — ► PLURAL NOUN ▪ money or income earned …   English terms dictionary

  • earnings — [ʉrn′iŋz] pl.n. 1. wages, salary, or other recompense earned by working 2. money made by an investment or an enterprise; profits …   English World dictionary

  • earnings — net income for the company during a period. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary Often a general phrase, meaning profits . It does however have a very specific definition in the context of earnings per share. Here, it is defined as profit after tax,… …   Financial and business terms

  • earnings — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ high, record, strong ▪ low, meagre/meager ▪ average ▪ annual, hourly …   Collocations dictionary

  • earnings — Income. That which is earned; i.e., money earned from performance of labor, services, sale of goods, etc. Revenue earned by an individual or business. Earnings generally include but are not limited to: salaries and wages, interest and dividends,… …   Black's law dictionary

  • earnings — Income. That which is earned; i.e., money earned from performance of labor, services, sale of goods, etc. Revenue earned by an individual or business. Earnings generally include but are not limited to: salaries and wages, interest and dividends,… …   Black's law dictionary

  • Earnings — The amount of profit that a company produces during a specific period, which is usually defined as a quarter (three calendar months) or a year. Earnings typically refer to after tax net income.Ultimately, a business s earnings are the main… …   Investment dictionary

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