Examples of using Eblt in English and their translations into Thai
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
So this is EBlT.
So EBlT is earnings.
So that's the way to think about EBlT.
EBlT divided by assets.
So that's what EBlT is right here.
EBlT is Earnings Before Interest and Taxes.
Let's compare EBlT to operating profit.
But this is the difference between operating income and EBlT.
So this is your EBlT divided by total assets.
But then the last one, if I have time to go over, we will call it EBlT.
Remember, EBlT is just Earnings Before.
Company A was getting a much lower EBlT return on his assets.
In this case, an EBlT might be a little bit more informative.
Sal said it's operating profit divided by asset, or EBlT divided by asset.
EBlT in this case would be the operating profit plus this investment income.
But just so you know what EBlT is, EBlT is just Earnings.
But if this cash was generating some profit unrelated to the operations of the business, it would be included in EBlT.
But in general if you take EBlT and you take out the non-operating income, you get back to operating profits.
You might immediately say, if I took net income-- so let's remember EBlT is just an acronym for Earnings Before.
So this guy has a 10% EBlT return on his assets, but his earnings or his net income is also this $1 million.
So when you want to figure out this guy's pre-tax income, you take EBlT minus-- actually, let me move the window down a.
Because it tells you either how much operating profit is being generated from here, or it could tell you how much EBlT.
And so you can already imagine that both EBlT and the way I defined it initially, operating profit divided by assets.
So EBlT, in the case that I just added some investment income, would be $1,010,000, while operating profit would be $1 million.
And I have gone over this in the past, but the distinction between operating profit and EBlT is that EBlT might include some non-operating income, which.
Company B, it's getting a 15% EBlT return on its assets, so it's generating $1.5 million in EBlT per year.
And so their operating profit, the amount of pre-tax income, but you know, we're not considering financing either, so this is their operating profit or their EBlT.
So if EBlT is 10% of this, that means that this guy is spitting out 10%, which would be $1 million of EBlT. .
Like a financial statement, most firms that aren't doing anything too fancy on their non-operating side of their balance sheet, EBlT and operating profit are pretty close to each other.
So his pre-tax-- let's do the bottom part of his balance sheet-- his EBlT, his Earnings Before Interest and Taxes, is $1.5 million, but then if you want to subtract out interest, you would subtract out minus $0.5 million, $500,000, and so his pre-tax is going to be $1 million.