earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization
Often shortened to: EBIT
EBITDA in Finance
(ibɪtdɑ) or earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization
noun
(Finance: Corporate)
EBITDA is the amount of profit that a person or company receives before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization have been deducted.
Now, we had an EBITDA profit of 60 million and a net profit of 10 million.
The company has managed in three years to boost sales by nearly 400 percent whiledramatically increasing both EBITDA and owners' compensation.
EBITDA is the amount of profit that a person or company receives before interest, taxes,depreciation, and amortization have been deducted.
EBITDA in Accounting
(ibɪtdɑ) or earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization
abbreviation
(Accounting: Financial statements, Income statement)
EBITDA is the amount of profit that a person or company receives before interest, taxes,depreciation, and amortization have been deducted.
Supporters of EBITDA as a measure argue that it is a good approximation for operating cash flow becauseit adds back depreciation and amortization, which are often major non-cash items.
The company has managed in three years to boost sales by nearly 400 percent whiledramatically increasing both EBITDA and owners' compensation.
EBITDA is the amount of profit that a person or company receives before interest, taxes,depreciation, and amortization have been deducted.