Companies Financial Statements As Reported API


OVERVIEW

All publicly-traded companies should provide financial reports to the investors. These statements show business activities, results and financial health by providing financial values. All traded companies include key metrics such as revenue in their reports; however, the other metrics may differ for each specific company.


This endpoint returns reported financial values from the company’s statements and can be used to get the values that the (financial statements endpoint) doesn’t have. The number of fields and their names differ because they are determined by the tag from the company's statements and the amount of information they provide.


During analysis, take a look into what every indicator means according to the specific company. Please note that even if two companies have the same metric in their reports, the method of counting the metric may differ.


Here is the list of general things that this endpoint usually returns for each company:


  • Date — the date of the report.
  • Symbol — a company’s symbol.
  • Period – Fiscal Year or quarterly.
  • GrossProfit — profit that the company made (revenue — costs of sold).
  • CostOfGoodsAndServicesSold (sometimes called CostOfRevenue) — direct costs of producing and delivering the goods that were sold.
  • NetIncomeLoss (may be called ProfitLoss) — the revenue after paying business expenses, such as Cost Of Sales, Research and Development expenses, etc.
  • MarketingExpences — the cost of marketing activities.
  • SellingAndGeneralAdministrativeExpences — expenses of running the business that wasn’t included in costs of productions or delivering the services.
  • OperatingIncomeLoss — the revenue that the company made from its main activities.
  • NonOperatingIncomeLoss — the revenue that the company made from its secondary activities
  • OperatingIncomeExpences — the cost of producing Operating Income.
  • NonOperatingIncomeExpences — the cost of producing Non-Operating income.
  • ResearchAndDevelopmentExpences — the cost of research and development activities, a usual metric for technical companies.
  • InterestIncome (InvestmetnsIncomeInterest) — earnings generated by investments. One of the main metrics for financial companies.
  • InterestExpense — the amount of money that was spent on investments. And many other kinds of metrics specific for each company.

Also, take a look at the endpoint with the (entire SEC financial statements).

Companies Financial Statements As Reported API


OVERVIEW

All publicly-traded companies should provide financial reports to the investors. These statements show business activities, results and financial health by providing financial values. All traded companies include key metrics such as revenue in their reports; however, the other metrics may differ for each specific company.


This endpoint returns reported financial values from the company’s statements and can be used to get the values that the (financial statements endpoint) doesn’t have. The number of fields and their names differ because they are determined by the tag from the company's statements and the amount of information they provide.


During analysis, take a look into what every indicator means according to the specific company. Please note that even if two companies have the same metric in their reports, the method of counting the metric may differ.


Here is the list of general things that this endpoint usually returns for each company:


  • Date — the date of the report.
  • Symbol — a company’s symbol.
  • Period – Fiscal Year or quarterly.
  • GrossProfit — profit that the company made (revenue — costs of sold).
  • CostOfGoodsAndServicesSold (sometimes called CostOfRevenue) — direct costs of producing and delivering the goods that were sold.
  • NetIncomeLoss (may be called ProfitLoss) — the revenue after paying business expenses, such as Cost Of Sales, Research and Development expenses, etc.
  • MarketingExpences — the cost of marketing activities.
  • SellingAndGeneralAdministrativeExpences — expenses of running the business that wasn’t included in costs of productions or delivering the services.
  • OperatingIncomeLoss — the revenue that the company made from its main activities.
  • NonOperatingIncomeLoss — the revenue that the company made from its secondary activities
  • OperatingIncomeExpences — the cost of producing Operating Income.
  • NonOperatingIncomeExpences — the cost of producing Non-Operating income.
  • ResearchAndDevelopmentExpences — the cost of research and development activities, a usual metric for technical companies.
  • InterestIncome (InvestmetnsIncomeInterest) — earnings generated by investments. One of the main metrics for financial companies.
  • InterestExpense — the amount of money that was spent on investments. And many other kinds of metrics specific for each company.

Also, take a look at the endpoint with the (entire SEC financial statements).

Companies Financial Statements As Reported

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