
Headline Earnings
Headline earnings refer to a method of reporting corporate earnings based entirely on operational, trading, and capital investment activities achieved during the previous period. Because headline earnings make these exclusions, it provides a better picture of a how company operates on an ongoing basis, where one-time charges or special items that are unlikely to occur again can give an unfair impression of true operations. A company's quality of earnings is important, so investors need to consider the validity of headline earnings and the exclusions that it makes on a case-by-case basis in order to avoid being misled or misinformed. By excluding asset sales, discontinued operations, restructuring charges and write-downs, the headline earnings number shows the profitability of a company's core business. Headline earnings refer to a method of reporting corporate earnings based entirely on operational, trading, and capital investment activities achieved during the previous period.

What Are Headline Earnings?
Headline earnings refer to a method of reporting corporate earnings based entirely on operational, trading, and capital investment activities achieved during the previous period. Excluded from the headline earnings figure are profits or losses associated with the sale or termination of discontinued operations, fixed assets or related businesses, or from any permanent devaluation or write-off of their values.



Understanding Headline Earnings
Headline earnings provide a stringent measurement tool to isolate core operational profitability. By excluding asset sales, discontinued operations, restructuring charges and write-downs, the headline earnings number shows the profitability of a company's core business. Because headline earnings make these exclusions, it provides a better picture of a how company operates on an ongoing basis, where one-time charges or special items that are unlikely to occur again can give an unfair impression of true operations. At the same time, these items certainly do matter for analysts, especially if they end up recurring or greatly impacting future prospects.
Some companies report headline earnings per share (EPS) in addition to required EPS figures that take into account other items. Because it does not account for these items, headline earnings are considered to be non-GAAP and must be reconciled with net income if presented in shareholder reports, in accordance with SEC regulations.
This basis for measuring headline earnings per share was implemented in 1993 by the former Institute of Investment Management and Research (IIMR) in the United Kingdom. IIMR developed this method as a way to better analyze a company's P&L statement with a picture that would better represent a firm's operations during "business as usual," which could be clouded by a one-time charge or write-off.
Criticism of Headline Earnings
A company's quality of earnings is important, so investors need to consider the validity of headline earnings and the exclusions that it makes on a case-by-case basis in order to avoid being misled or misinformed. For instance, research has shown that headline figures are more likely to exclude losses than gains. GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) earnings now significantly trail non-GAAP earnings, as companies become accustomed to including "one-time" adjustments or charges, which become problematic when they start to occur every quarter.
For example, Merck (MRK) turned a loss of $0.02 per share under GAAP standards into an "adjusted" headline EPS of $1.11 a share in the third quarter of 2017 — a 5,650% difference.
Related terms:
Devaluation
Devaluation is the deliberate downward adjustment to the value of a country's currency relative to another currency, group of currencies, or standard. read more
Discontinued Operations
In financial accounting, discontinued operations refer to parts of a company’s core business or product line that have been divested or shut down. read more
Earnings
A company's earnings are its after-tax net income, meaning its profits. Earnings are the main determinant of a public company's share price. read more
Earnings Per Share (EPS)
Earnings per share (EPS) is the portion of a company's profit allocated to each outstanding share of common stock. Earnings per share serve as an indicator of a company's profitability. read more
Fixed Asset
A fixed asset is a long-term tangible asset that a firm owns and uses to produce income and is not expected to be used or sold within a year. read more
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)
GAAP is a common set of generally accepted accounting principles, standards, and procedures that public companies in the U.S. must follow when they compile their financial statements. read more
Non-GAAP Earnings
Non-GAAP earnings are pro forma earnings figures, adjusted to eliminate one-time transactions to provide a "truer" picture of a company's performance. read more
Nonrecurring Gain Or Loss
A nonrecurring gain or loss is an infrequent profit or expense that doesn't arise from a company’s normal operations. read more
One-Time Charge
A one-time charge is a charge against a company’s earnings that the company’s managers say they expect is an isolated event and unlikely to occur again. read more
Operating Cash Flow (OCF)
Operating Cash Flow (OCF) is a measure of the amount of cash generated by a company's normal business operations. read more