ActualPrevious
After-Tax - Y/Y10.0%10.9%
With Inventory & Consumption Adjustments - Y/Y5.3%6.4%

Highlights

At an annualized rate of $3.168 trillion, year-over-year after-tax corporate profits rose a very sizable 10.0 percent in the first quarter compared to last year's first quarter (revised down from an initial 10.9 percent). When including inventory valuation and consumption adjustments, after-tax profits of $2.727 trillion in the first quarter were up 5.3 percent on the year (revised from 6.4 percent); taxes on corporate income, at a hefty $640.3 billion annual rate in the first quarter and which are calculated on this basis, were up a year-over-year 11.1 percent (revised up from 10.8 percent).

Definition

Corporate profits are derived from the national income and product accounts and are expressed in several measures. Econoday's focus is on the most relevant measure for the total economy, after-tax profits.

Description

Corporate profits are the lifeblood of investment spending. Profits are the income of a corporation. When profits are strong, then companies will be able to increase their capital spending. This could allow better growth prospects for a company and is likely to increase its underlying value. When corporate profits decline, then capital spending tends to decline. Without the potential for growth, a company could be at a disadvantage, particularly in our global economic environment.

Corporate profits also reveal the health of an organization. When a company's profits are anemic during economic expansion, it suggests that the company is not performing efficiently. The value of an inefficient company is determined by its stock price. Thus weak profits signal lower stock prices. When a company's profits are relatively strong, even during an economic downturn, it usually means that the organization is well-managed. The higher value for this type of company is reflected in a higher stock price.
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