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Gross Revenue

Business Gross profit marginGross sales

Gross Revenue
"Raw" sales income; the amount customers actually pay the company when they make their purchases.

 


GROSS REVENUE - income (at invoice values) received for goods and services over some given period of ti...
GROSS REVENUES - Generally, all annual receipts of a revenue bond issuer prior to the payment of all ex...

Gross Revenue
The total revenue from all sources before subtraction of expenses incurred in gaining such revenue. Revenue minus cost of goods sold.
Guarantee of Title
An assurance of clear title.

Gross Revenues
Generally, all annual receipts of a revenue bond issuer prior to the payment of all expenses. Normally only Net Revenues are pledged to the repayment of bonds.

gross revenues are generated by traditional gasoline station retail, or
floor space in the building (including restrooms, counters, and other areas allocable to traditional service station "services") are devoted to the petroleum marketing activity.

The gross revenue or SALES of a business over a period.
STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE
See SOP.

Gross Income
The gross revenue or sales of a business over a period.
Gross Margin
Gross profit expressed as a percent of net sales.

The TM Forum conducted a benchmark survey in 2008 that concluded average leakage, not including losses due to fraud, was 1% of the gross revenues for those telcos that took part [1].

In the name of all that is holy in finance, if you still record inflated "retail" or gross revenues before contractual allowances where the allowances are standard, substantial, and clearly known at the time of billing, please stop the madness.

The Fortune 500 list ranks US companies by gross revenues. Fortune 500 companies must be US companies and publicly held. The gross revenues used to rank the Fortune 500 companies is the company's gross revenue for its previous fiscal year.

Earnings are generally considered gross revenue minus expenses. Corporate expenses that relate to capital expenditures are usually deducted in full (for example, trucks are fully deductible in the Canadian tax system, ...

financial analysis that identifies the point at which expenses equal gross revenue for a zero net difference. For example, if a mailing costs $100 and each item generates $5 in revenue, the break-even point is at 20 items sold.

To give you a handle on how this form works, your gross revenue from sales and other business income items are reported on the top of the Schedule C or C-EZ.

SDCF, along with business gross revenues, is also frequently used in market-based business valuation methods, such as the business valuation Comparative Transaction Method.
Tools for Business Valuation
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For example, if your bakery business buys flour and yeast, rents a shop and equipment, and pays for fuel, its contribution to GDP is not the sales price of the bread made, but the difference between gross revenues and purchased materials and services ...

Payout: Payout is the point at which the gross revenues from production in a group investment project equal the sum of all costs.

Business interruption insurance covers loss of gross profit, gross revenue or gross rentals due to reduction in turnover and increased cost of working following loss or damage caused by any of the insured perils.

Monetization
The securitization of the gross revenues of a contract.
Monetize the debt
Financing the national debt by printing new money, which causes inflation due to a larger money supply.

Monetization: Securitization of the gross revenues of a contract.
Monoline Insurance: Insurance of an individual financial risk (rather than general casualty insurance).

Monetization
Definition: [crh] The securitization of the gross revenues of a contract.

Term used to describe a firm's revenue after the amount of returns, allowances, and discounts is deducted from gross revenue from the firm's principal operations.
net settlement ...

The monthly fees paid to the franchise company in order to support corporate marketing and advertising. This fee is typically a percentage of your gross revenues.
B
Business Format Franchising ...

OIL DEPLETION ALLOWANCE " An allowable (by congress) percentage of tax-free income that an investor in an oil and gas limited partnership can receive from the gross revenues generated by the sale of gas and oil from a producing property.

the profit available once all expenses (operating expenses, interest charges, taxes and dividends on preferred stock) have been deducted from the gross revenue. The term earnings is sometimes used to describe income, net income, profit or net profit.

Rather than a set percentage payment, the preferred dividend comes in the form of a percentage of gross revenues of the company.

6 million tourists visited Cuba in 1999 with about $1.9 billion in gross revenues. The official projections for 2000 are only slightly higher than in 1999.

(Profit is determined by the market-based rental value of contributed capital assets, or by the gross revenues resulting from market-determined "just prices" less the market-based cost of the factors of production, including labor.) ...

GROSS MARGIN Ratio of gross profits to gross revenue.
GROSS PROFITS The gross profits from a business transaction are the amount computed by deducting from the gross receipts of the transaction the allocable purchases or production costs of sales, ...

owner of a property - typically an offshore oil and gas property - leases it out to another party for development and production. A net profits interest may be granted instead of a royalty interest, where the holder receives a share of gross revenues ...

gross revenue The revenue minus cost of goods sold. gross sales The total invoice value of sales, before deducting for customer discounts, allowances, or returns.

See also: Expense, Tax deduction, Capitalized, Job, Equity investment

Business Gross profit marginGross sales

 
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