Cash Earnings Per Share - Cash EPS

  

Cash earnings per share compares a company's cash flow to the number of shares it has currently outstanding. It brings the cash flow figure down to the level of the individual shareholders. You can find this measure by dividing operating cash flow by number of shares. This is a handy number because it shows exactly how much profit each share is worth.

Consider pies at a holiday party. Everyone has that one relative that binges on the pie you like, so you have to call dibs right? Don't feel bad, we all do this. Pie is serious business. At any given time, you want to know how big a slice you have coming to you, even if you don't eat it all right this second. Cash earnings per share is like that...it's how much of the pie is theoretically yours.

The figure should not be confused with earnings per share, which is net income divided by shares. Net income is not necessarily all available to be paid out to investors at a given moment, whereas cash is theoretically more easily distributed. (Not that the company will necessarily hand out any of that cash; that's up to the board of directors...it's not like you can go into company HQ with your shares and demand your cash earnings per share.) Generally, the cash earnings per share is considered a more accurate way to measure the stability of the business.

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Finance: What is cash flow v earnings?17 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop what is cash flow versus earnings Okay

00:08

you think profits or profits right Well not unless you

00:11

spell it P r o p h e t s

00:14

Ask a gandhi or jeff bezos about that All right

00:17

Well in the land of accounting there are aptly named

00:20

accounting profits and there are also cash profits and the

00:25

two of them are often very different Accounting laws skew

00:29

things when it comes to assessing riel cash profits Here's

00:33

out the ceo and founder of give a dog a

00:35

drone A company that specializes in engineering remote control toys

00:40

for your pets built a drone stamping factory for one

00:43

hundred million dollars knowing that it will be worth twenty

00:46

million dollars in scrap value in just four years Well

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he'll sell at that point and possibly upgrade if demand

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for puppy and kitty tech is still high will drone

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sales or steady producing cash profits of fifty million bucks

00:59

a year each year into the foreseeable future but stated

01:03

earnings and cash flows here are very different In the

01:07

first year when the factory was built the company lost

01:10

big cash money because it had to write one hundred

01:13

Million dollar check to the builder of the factory Yes

01:16

it made fifty million in profits but that year it

01:20

lost fifty million dollars in cash Luckily it had no

01:24

debt and it had one hundred twenty five million dollars

01:27

in the bank Well that bank account went down to

01:29

just twenty five million when they wrote one hundred million

01:32

dollar check But it gradually filled back up to seventy

01:35

five million by the time that year was done fifty

01:38

million of profits and that fifty million in cash Yeah

01:41

that that helps that floated right back in there Okay

01:44

so the cash that year was volatile It was a

01:46

hundred twenty five million to start But then i went

01:48

down to twenty five million after the factory purchase than

01:50

end up a year later with fifty million added to

01:52

their coffers and gas profits from operation leaving them with

01:57

seventy five million bucks in the bank got all that

01:59

All right So here's where the difference hits between accounting

02:02

profits perspective and a cash flow perspective on the notion

02:06

of profit Simply put it isn't fair for the company

02:09

Tohave a view that the one hundred million dollars factory

02:13

as an expense should all hit the profits line all

02:17

in one year as if they bore the burden of

02:19

all that factory cost in one year and then showing

02:22

it is being worthless in years Two three four and

02:26

maybe beyond In fact the company doing proper accounting depreciates

02:31

that factory in value to the tune of twenty million

02:34

dollars a year for for four years until it will

02:37

then sell it for scrap for twenty million bucks So

02:40

that hit to the company in the first year should

02:42

be twenty million dollars in value not one hundred million

02:46

in cash That's an accounting change of assessing twenty million

02:50

in expenses not one hundred million how's that work well

02:53

the decline in value of that hundred million dollars takes

02:56

five years And it looks like this But in your

02:58

won the company loses one hundred million dollars in cash

03:01

but gains a factory Confused Good Okay well let's zoom

03:04

forward to your floor The company again made fifty million

03:08

dollars in cash profits but it will show earnings of

03:10

only thirty million Why Well because proper accounting using straight

03:14

lined appreciation of that hundred million dollar factory properly shows

03:18

the company depreciating it's value another twenty million dollars against

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its cash profitability So what A thirty percent tax rate

03:25

company pays taxes on thirty million of profits or a

03:28

tax bill of nine million bucks It's accounting earnings are

03:31

actually twenty one million dollars but it will have produced

03:34

cash or cash flow of fifty million dollars minus the

03:38

nine million in taxes or forty one million in cash

03:42

profits I either Cash flow is almost double the reported

03:47

accounting profits Now with all that profit our company can

03:50

finally start mass producing kitty copters Yeah yeah we're naming 00:03:55.308 --> [endTime] this cat todd

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