What's wrong with corporate America in five charts
Submitted by gjohnsit on Wed, 06/10/2015 - 1:27pm
There was an interesting AP article yesterday that got largely overlooked.
As the stock market climbs ever higher, professional investors are warning that companies are presenting misleading versions of their results that ignore a wide variety of normal costs of running a business to make it seem like they're doing better than they really are.
What's worse, the financial analysts who are supposed to fight corporate spin are often playing along. Instead of challenging the companies, they're largely passing along the rosy numbers in reports recommending stocks to investors.
You don't say?!? How shocking! Wall Street is lying to us? And everyone is playing along.
That's never happened before. Well, except for every, single day.
An analysis of results from 500 major companies by The Associated Press, based on data provided by S&P Capital IQ, a research firm, found that the gap between the "adjusted" profits that analysts cite and bottom-line earnings figures that companies are legally obliged to report, or net income, has widened dramatically over the past five years.
At one of every five companies, these "adjusted" profits were higher than net income by 50 percent or more. Many more companies are in that category now than there were five years ago. And some companies that seem profitable on an adjusted basis are actually losing money.
So how does that work exactly? I'd like to present five charts that I believe describe the situation in no uncertain terms.
Comments
It's all a rigged casino ponzi scheme ripoff
that's what it is. I've never like the Stock market and Wall St. It's like the Federal Reserve System, we're conditioned
to think it's the best system for humans, or most humans don't even fucking think about it, they just accept it without
realizing that's what's screwing them.
It should all be abolished and we can start over. That's why I hate the proposals such as a 1% tax on transactions. Screw that,
they'll just find a way around it. It's a system we don't need, the rich need it.