Undergraduate Education Debt Institution Level & Control Percent Borrowing Cumulative Debt Overall Total (4, 2 and < 2 year) 58.8% $18,625 Public 49.4% $16,369 Private Non-Profit 69.7% $26,683 Private For-Profit 93.1% $17,162 4-year Total 66.5% $22,656 4-year Public 61.1% $19,839 4-year Private Non-Profit 70.6% $27,349 4-year Private For-Profit 97.0% $24,635 2-year Total 44.8% $12,307 2-year Public 37.2% $10,444 2-year Private Non-Profit 64.0% $14,790 2-year Private For-Profit 97.6% $17,310 < 2-year Total 74.7% $10,172 < 2-year Public 36.1% $10,321 < 2-year Private Non-Profit 45.0% $10,990 < 2-year Private For-Profit 86.0% $10,123
total sales or business (loss or profit) done in a financial year
previous year profit under stated and present year profit understated
They have not released the 4th quarter numbers at this point. The first 3 quarters they have a total profit of $251 million. Their forecast at the beginning of the year was a profit outlook of $330 to $350 million.
You cannot. You can build/compose the total GP from annual sales but you cannot decompose it if the individual annual information that make up the annual GP is lost.
Google made around 2.73 billion dollars. They make their money from advertisements.
Annual sales refers to the total sales have been made in a given year. When you deduct the expenditure from annual sales, you would be able to get your profit for the year.
If the profit is 5800 in year one and 6500 in the next year what is the percentage of profit? Does this actually mean "what is the increase in profit from year one to year two"? Otherwise I would need to know more information as to the percentage of profit with regards to: cost, the company average, or the variable that is to be compared, so personally I think the question should be rephrased.
35% on accounting -175% after contract term
1,500,000 homes a year
how much profit did tesco make last year
To determine your net profit , add up your annual expenses for the running of your business etc & subtract that figure from your gross profit. Or you get the gross profit by adding your opening stock at the beginning of the year & your annual purchases , deduct your closing stock from this figure & subtract the resulting figure from your annual sales. In simple words, GROSS PROFIT = SALES less COST OF SALES. (Cost of Sales covers all costs related directly to Sales) NET PROFIT = TOTAL EXPENSES less TOTAL REVENUE