
Primary Earnings Per Share (EPS)
Primary earnings per share (EPS) is a measure of a company's earnings per common share, prior to the conversion of any outstanding convertible securities. Primary earnings per share (EPS) is a measure of a company's earnings per common share, prior to the conversion of any outstanding convertible securities It is one of two methods for categorizing shares outstanding. 1:10 Diluted EPS is more complicated to compute than Primary Earnings Per Share (EPS), but it is considered more conservative because it takes into account all the outstanding convertible shares, warrants, and options that could potentially be converted to tradable shares. Primary earnings per share (EPS) is a measure of a company's earnings per common share, prior to the conversion of any outstanding convertible securities. EPS can be calculated in many different ways depending on the accounting methods and assumptions the company uses, so investors taking EPS into account should understand how the EPS figure they are using was calculated.

What Is Primary Earnings Per Share (EPS)?
Primary earnings per share (EPS) is a measure of a company's earnings per common share, prior to the conversion of any outstanding convertible securities. It is one of two methods for categorizing shares outstanding. The other method is fully diluted earnings per share (Diluted EPS).
The term "basic EPS" is more commonly used instead of "primary EPS." Basic EPS is the simpler method to categorize outstanding shares, as it uses the number of shares currently available for trading. To calculate basic EPS, divide net income by the number of shares outstanding. Primary Earnings Per Share has largely been called Basic Earnings Per Share since 1998.




Understanding Primary Earnings Per Share (EPS)
Diluted EPS is more complicated to compute than Primary Earnings Per Share (EPS), but it is considered more conservative because it takes into account all the outstanding convertible shares, warrants, and options that could potentially be converted to tradable shares. If none of these financial instruments are outstanding, diluted EPS and primary EPS will be equal.
Primary EPS does not take into consideration the dilution of earnings available to each common share upon the conversion of convertible securities or the exercise of certain warrants which may be outstanding. If there are securities outstanding that could be converted into common shares, the primary EPS will be higher than fully diluted EPS.
EPS can be calculated in many different ways depending on the accounting methods and assumptions the company uses. Investors taking EPS into account in any decision-making process should understand how the EPS figure they are using was calculated.
Example of Primary Earnings Per Share Calculation
For example, a company has a net income of $40 million and pays out $5 million in dividends to preferred stockholders. The company has 12 million shares outstanding for the first half of the quarter and 13 million shares outstanding for the second half, or an average of 12.5 million shares. In this case, you would calculate earnings per share as follows:
$40 million – $5 million = $35 million
$35 million ÷ 12.5 million shares = $2.80 per share share
Thus this company's earnings came to $2.80 per share.
We can extend this example to include the effects of dilution. Let's say this company had 2 million convertible preferred shares. Now, the denominator (outstanding shares) becomes 14.5 million effective shares outstanding. Hence, $35 million ÷ 14.5 million shares = $2.41 per share. Here we can see the effects of earnings dilution.
Related terms:
Accounting Method
Accounting method refers to the rules a company follows in reporting revenues and expenses in accrual accounting and cash accounting. read more
Basic Earnings Per Share (EPS)
Basic earnings per share (EPS) tells investors how much of a firm's net income was allotted to each share of common stock. read more
Diluted Normalized Earnings Per Share
Diluted normalized earnings per share measures a company's regular earnings distributed across its shares outstanding and those exercised in the future. read more
Diluted Earnings per Share (Diluted EPS)
Diluted EPS is a performance metric used to assess a company's earnings per share (EPS) if all convertible securities were realized. 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
Financial Instrument
A financial instrument is a real or virtual document representing a legal agreement involving any kind of monetary value. read more
Fully Diluted Shares
Fully diluted shares represent the total number of shares that will be outstanding after all possible sources of conversion are exercised. read more
If-Converted Method
Investors use the if-converted method to calculate the value of convertible securities if they were converted into new shares. It also compares EPS to diluted EPS. read more
Outstanding Shares
Shares outstanding refer to a company's stock currently held by all its shareholders, including share blocks held by institutional investors and restricted shares owned by the company’s insiders. read more