Examples of metric in the following topics:
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- Share repurchases often give an advantage to insiders and can be used to manipulate financial metrics.
- Furthermore, share repurchases can be used to manipulate financial metrics.
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- Working capital is a financial metric which represents operating liquidity available to a business, organization and other entity.
- Working capital (abbreviated WC) is a financial metric which represents operating liquidity available to a business, organization or other entity, including a governmental entity.
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- Share repurchases are beneficial when the stock is undervalued, management needs to meet a financial metric, or there is a takeover threat.
- In some instances, executive compensation may be tied to meeting certain earnings per share (EPS) metrics.
- If management needs to boost the EPS of the company to meet the metric, s/he has two choices: raise earnings or reduce the number of shares.
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- Working capital (WC) is an important metric for all businesses, regardless of their size.
- WC is an important metric, but is not the whole story of a company's financial health.
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- This often involves comparing the same metric historically, either by examining it in tables or charts.
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- Working capital (WC) is a financial metric which represents operating liquidity available to a business, organization, or other entity, including governmental entity.
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- The most useful comparisons can be made when metrics definitions are common and consistent between compared units and over time.
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- NPV is still commonly used, but firms will also use other metrics before making investment decisions.
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- Finally, there is no metric to find a good or bad ROA.
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- As a management tool, this metric makes explicit the interrelatedness of decisions regarding inventories, accounts receivable and payable, and cash.