Diluted Earnings Per Share - Explained
What are Diluted Earnings Per Share?
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What are Diluted Earnings Per Share?
The basic earnings per share of a company refer to the earnings made on the shares of its stock. This metric takes into account the net earning/income of a company and the total number of outstanding shares the company has.
Diluted Earnings Per Share (Diluted EPS) is a measure of a company's earnings if all its convertible securities were exercised. As such, it expands the calculation of the total number of shares of the company.
Unlike basic earnings per share that only accounts for existing common stock, diluted EPS accounts for convertible preferred shares, convertible bonds, warrants, stock options, and others.
Common Dilutive Securities
When a company's convertible securities are exercised, have effect of the Diluted EPS and the basic EPS of a company. The most common dilutive or convertible securities are highlighted below;
- Stock options: This is a benefit that an employee receives from an employer. This is an option that if exercised, allows an employee to purchase the stock of a company at a discounted price.
- Convertible preferred stock: This refers to preferred shares that can easily be converted into common shares at a predetermined date.
- Convertible bonds: These are otherwise called bonds debenture, they are bonds that can be converted into a number of a company's shares at a specific time.
Related Topics
- Trend Analysis of Financial Statements
- Common-Size Analysis (Vertical Analysis) of Financial Statements
- Common-Size Financial Statement
- Net Dollar Retention
- Horizontal Analysis
- Per Share Basis
- Profitability Ratios
- Gross Margin Ratio
- Profit Margin
- After Tax Profit Margin
- Return on Assets
- Total Shareholder Return
- Cash on Cash Return
- Earnings Per Share
- Diluted Earnings Per Share
- Asset Turnover Ratio
- Berry Ratio
- Break-Even Analysis
- Liquidity Ratio
- Current ratio (Working Capital Ratio)
- Working Ratio
- Quick Ratio
- Quick Assets
- Days Sales Outstanding
- Cash Ratio (Operating Cash Flow Ratio)
- Receivables turnover ratio (often converted to average collection period)
- Accounts Payable Turnover Ratio
- Inventory turnover ratio (often converted to average sale period)
- Solvency (Coverage Ratios)
- Leverage Ratio (Debt Ratio)
- Asset Coverage Ratio
- Debt to Equity
- Debt to Income Ratio
- Debt Coverage Ratio
- Times Interest Earned
- Market Capitalization
- Price to Equity Ratio
- Book-To-Market Ratio
- Price to Earnings Ratio
- Price to Earnings Growth (PEG) Ratio
- Price to Earnings Growth Payback Ratio
- CAPE Ratio
- Price to Cash Flow Ratio
- Capital Maintenance
- Book to Bill Ratio
- Asset Turnover Ratio
- Plowback Ratio
- Days Inventory Outstanding
- Days Payable Outstanding
- Days Sales Outstanding
- Non-financial Performance Measures: The Balance Scorecard