The GOP (Gross Operating Profit) is the profit left after operational costs have been deducted. EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) is the amount of profit with those items in its acronym added back into it.
There is no difference, both are the same.
A very crude way of looking at the two is :EBIDTA (-) Interest (-) Tax = FFO.
Gross profit is the revenue minus the cost of goods sold, while EBITDA is a measure of a company's operating performance that adds back interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization to net income.
EBITDA Margin is the ratio of EBITDA to Sales Revenue. Example: Revenue of $10,458 and EBITDA of $871 yeilds EBITDA Margin of 8.3%.
EBITDA Margin = EBITDA/Sales
Depends on what you're comparing it to. Since EBITDA is a dollar amount, it's not really something you can compare between companies, especially of different sizes. Obviously, you want EBITDA to be positive, as it is essentially revenue. It would help with comparisons to convert it to a percentage change. (EBITDA2 - EBITDA1)/(EBITDA1) where EBITDA2 is EBITDA at period 2 and EBITDA1 is EBITDA at period 1. That way, you can see how much EBITDA has grown for a given company in a percentage. Then, you can compare it to similar companies. Higher is usually better.
Yes, EBITDA Margin can be negative. When a company is positive it is due to good efficiencies processes that have kept certain expenses low. While Negative EBITDA can suggest the contrary.
Not necessarily. A negative EBITDA implies that the entity is not capable to cover its interest and tax payments with its operating profits.
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No, property taxes are not taken out of EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization). EBITDA focuses on a company's operational performance by excluding interest, taxes, and non-cash expenses like depreciation and amortization. Therefore, property taxes, which are considered an operating expense, would typically be factored into net income but not into EBITDA calculations.
No, the GOP does not have superdelegates in their nomination process.