The answer depends on what information you have about profits per units sold, or on the costs and revenues per unit.
It is when you keep your dividends relative to your Earnings per share. Not too high dividends and not too low.
You can divide any unit of energy by any unit of time; but the standard SI unit is Joules / second, and has the special name "Watt".
Sure. That's a perfectly good unit of momentum. So is (any unit of mass) divided by (any unit of speed).
Carriage is transportation cost. If you are selling the product in your store, you would calculate how much it cost to transport the goods to your store, then factor in the per unit shipping cost. Do a simple COGS (cost of goods sold) calculation. Add the per unit shipping cost to the cost make or buy the product per unit, then add your profit mark-up, say 30%.
Dividends paid divided by the toal number of shares outstanding.
Variable cost per unit = Total variable cost / total number of units manufactured
Contribution margin per unit is calculated by subtracting the variable cost of the item from the selling price of the item.
Easiest way: Total costs per unit - fixed costs per unit = variable cost per unit. Also recatting into accounting.
Productivity is the average amount of produce per unit area.Data on input per unit area,energy consumption,cost per unit area,etc.are used to calculate productivity.
Fixed cost / (selling price - Variable cost per unit) --> Fixed cost ----------------------------------------------- (Selling Price - Variable Cost Per Unit)
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For my opinion Earning par share refer to a full dividend after expenses. But if we have prefered stock we need to seperate prefered stock dividends and take its balance for common stock dividends by:Earning per share = Balance after prefered stock dividends / Number of shareOne more Dividends per share refer to balance for common stcok after we seperate balance after prefered stock dividends to both side, common stockdividends and retained earning.Dividends per share = Common stock dividends / Number of shareis that right? if another have any ideas please let me know.Thanks.!
The answer depends on what information you have about profits per units sold, or on the costs and revenues per unit.
Following data is required to calculate break even point: 1 - Sales revenue or sales price per unit 2 - variable cost per unit 3 - fixed cost
It is when you keep your dividends relative to your Earnings per share. Not too high dividends and not too low.
To calculate the break-even point, you need to know the fixed costs, variable costs per unit, and the selling price per unit. Break-even point (in units) = Fixed Costs / (Selling Price per Unit - Variable Cost per Unit) Without specific values for fixed costs, selling price per unit, and variable cost per unit, I can't provide you with an exact break-even point. Please provide these values, and I'll be happy to help you calculate the break-even point.