EBITDA margin is a financial metric used to assess a company’s profitability before accounting for interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. This measure represents the percentage of revenue ...
Ebitda – Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, takes operating profit and adds back two subjective costs: depreciation and amortisation. If you read the business pages for any ...
Barclay Palmer is a creative executive with 10+ years of creating or managing premium programming and brands/businesses across various platforms. EBITDA excludes interest, taxes, depreciation, and ...
Robert Kelly is managing director of XTS Energy LLC, and has more than three decades of experience as a business executive. He is a professor of economics and has raised more than $4.5 billion in ...
With the recent and continually evolving tariffs announced by the current U.S. executive administration, a number of issuers, borrowers and financing parties have been asking “can those new tariffs be ...
The framework for defining EBITDA in middle-market credit agreements is often portable from one industry to another. But the one-size-fits-all approach does not work for the restaurant industry. In ...
In leveraged loans, EBITDA add-backs now reduce reported leverage at issuance by roughly 1.2 turns of leverage. In direct ...
Adjusted EBITDA is intended to provide a true picture of a company’s earnings. In M&A deals, companies will often strip out or add back one-time, non-cash expenses, such as restructuring costs, ...
(Editor's Note: This article reflects the views and opinions of Editor Marc Pentacoff and does not reflect the views of Seeking Alpha or its editorial team.) EBITDA stands for earnings before interest ...