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Extraordinary Items

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Extraordinary items
A nonrecurring event that must be explained to stockholders in an annual or quarterly report. Examples include expenses related to acquisitions or plant shutdowns, results of legal proceedings or unanticipated tax benefits.

 


Extraordinary Items
Charges for extraordinary and rare items.
Fair Value ...

Extraordinary Items: charges for items that are both unusual in nature and infrequent in occurrence, such as earthquake-related losses.
...

*Excluding extraordinary items.
Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.
Company
Trailing P/E ...

Examples of extraordinary items include expenses to deal with a fire, earthquake, or uninsured losses from a flood, the gain or loss from early retirement of debt, or the expropriation of a property by a foreign government.

Stands for earnings before interest, income taxes, depreciation accounting, amortization of deferred charges, and extraordinary items.

(c) The registrant's and its other subsidiaries' equity in the income of the subsidiary from continuing operations before taxes, extraordinary items, ...

When calculating these ratios, be sure to exclude extraordinary items or discontinued operations as these items will distort the core profitability that these ratios are looking to measure.

Each company's gains and/or losses from nonrecurring or extraordinary items or discontinued operations are listed. Utilities usually have more of these than most nonutility companies.

A firm`s net Cash inflow resulting directly from its regular operations (disregarding extraordinary items such as the Sale of fixed Assets or Transaction costs associated with issuing securities), ...

A company's ongoing operations, not counting cash derived from asset-sales or other extraordinary items.
Investing terms and definitions starting with
Numbers A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Q Y Z ...

it has a track record of distributable profits in terms of section 205 of the Companies Act, 1956, for at least three out of the immediately preceding five years: Provided that extraordinary items shall not be considered for calculating distributable ...

Last twelve months (LTM) earnings from total operations (not including extraordinary items) divided by the Most Recent Quarter Common Stock Equity.
Revenue
Income received from normal business activities.

Presented as a percentage figure, it is derived by dividing annual income (before extraordinary items, discontinued operations, cumulative accounting adjustments and non-recurring items) by an average of the latest fiscal year and the prior year's ...

It excludes extraordinary items such as, all realized gains and losses on investments or discontinued operations, taxes, prior year adjustments, write-offs of intangibles, bonuses and other profit distributions to employees, sales of divisions, etc.

It includes special items, such as extraordinary items or discontinued operations. It indicates the issuer's annualized earnings for the latest financial reporting period.

United States, the Financial Accounting Standards Board requires the earnings per share be recorded on the company's income statement. They require EPS records on net income, continuing operations, discontinued operations, and extraordinary items.

See also: Extra, Share, Profit, Report, Income

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