Business

How to Read a Company Earnings Report Without an MBA

Four times a year, public companies open their books. Earnings reports look intimidating, but a few numbers tell most of the story. Revenue and profit...

How to Read a Company Earnings Report Without an MBA

Four times a year, public companies open their books. Earnings reports look intimidating, but a few numbers tell most of the story.

Revenue and profit

Start with revenue (total sales) and net income (what is left after costs). Growth in both is the healthiest sign. Check margins — profit as a share of revenue — to see whether growth is efficient or bought with heavy spending.

Earnings per share vs. expectations

EPS divides profit across shares. Markets care less about the absolute number than whether it beat or missed analyst expectations — and what management says about the future.

Guidance and cash flow

Guidance is the company’s own forecast; it often moves the stock more than the results themselves. And free cash flow — real money generated — is harder to massage than accounting profit, which makes it a favorite of seasoned investors.

The takeaway

Revenue, margins, EPS versus expectations, guidance, and cash flow. Read those five and you have grasped most of what moved the stock.

Red flags worth a second look

Healthy reports share a rhythm: revenue and profit growing together, stable or rising margins, and guidance that roughly matches reality. Warning signs include profit rising while revenue stalls (cost-cutting has limits), one-off gains dressed up as core earnings, and rising “adjusted” figures that drift ever further from actual cash flow. None of these is automatically damning — but each deserves a closer read before you trust the headline number.

Key takeaways

  • Read revenue, margins, EPS vs expectations, guidance and cash flow.
  • Guidance often moves the stock more than the quarter itself.
  • Free cash flow is harder to massage than accounting profit.

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