What type of a percentage an industrial partner will take from the company profit varies greatly depending on the type and size of the partnership. A partner might take up to 50% of the profit or might take less.
This depends on the amount of effort the partner brings in and the real expertise on the table. Usually in larger industries with higher turnover the percentages would be much smaller. In this situation we would probably be looking at a 5 % of the total profits. For smaller industries we would look at slightly larger percentages for the industrial partner. Usually 20 percent of the annual net profits (after costs) is the maximum an industrial partner would receive. However a percentage this large would usually mean that the industrial partner would have to buy shares in the company amounting to his profit sharing percentage after a few years. This i believe is the norm.
General motors is for profit company.
credit to gainig partner &debit to sacrificing partner
It is not because what makes you think what you have earned is not belonging to the company? with no profit, company will gone bankrupt easily if net profit is liability. if it is liability, who is the company owing the money to?
a monthly profit means to make a profit every month in a company.
This depends on the amount of effort the partner brings in and the real expertise on the table. Usually in larger industries with higher turnover the percentages would be much smaller. In this situation we would probably be looking at a 5 % of the total profits. For smaller industries we would look at slightly larger percentages for the industrial partner. Usually 20 percent of the annual net profits (after costs) is the maximum an industrial partner would receive. However a percentage this large would usually mean that the industrial partner would have to buy shares in the company amounting to his profit sharing percentage after a few years. This i believe is the norm.
Dividends
560%=5.6=560/100 560 percent might be correct. If a company made £10 profit in 2008 and £9 profit in 2009, the 2009 profit would be 90% of the profit in 2008. If the same company made £9 profit again in 2010, the 2010 profit would be 100% of the profit in 2009 (100% means exactly the same amount). If the same company made £50.40 profit in 2011, the 2011 profit would be 560% of the profit in 2010 because £50.40 is 5.6 times as much as £9.
100%
All profits go directly to the partners. The amount each partner will receive will be determined by the amount each partner has invested in the company and/or the partnership agreement.
the capital partner is investing goods which is also a value based product. working partner do all the work should be paid a valuable salary based on his talent and 1/3 share from profit and the capital partner 2/3 profit only.
The chair of the board of directors says, "There is a 50 percent chance this company will earn a profit, a 30 percent chance it will break even, and a 20 percent chance it will lose money next quarter".
profit in a company this is increase in revenue received by the company. profit in a company this is increase in revenue received by the company.
No, a non-profit company cannot also be a profit company. You can only be one or the other and not both.
You would receive 20 percent vested in the profit sharing plan when you leave the company since that is the amount you are vested at the time of your departure. Vested percentage is based on your tenure with the company and does not increase retroactively.
They may take as much of the profits as the by laws allow, especially if it is not a shareholder owned company. It's nice that they only take 30% of the profit, presumeably either plowing the 70% back into the company to grow it, or paying it out in dividends.
No, USAA is not a non-profit company. It is a financial services company that operates as a for-profit organization.