Revenue
Business Concept
Charter narrows first-quarter lossCharter narrows first-quarter loss NEW YORK -- Cable operator Charter Communications narrowed its first-quarter loss as it grew revenue by adding subscribers. The St. Louis-based company posted a loss of $334 million, compared with a $357... In this article: Revenue, Charter Communications, Pro forma, Bankruptcy, St. Louis, and NEW YORK |
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www.washingtonpost.com | June 12, 2007
Bush Weighs In Against Investors In Fraud Case
...its financial problems. How the court handles the Charter case will have bearing on a stalled lawsuit filed by Enron investors who allege that Merrill Lynch and Barclays helped Enron generate phony revenue. A fierce lobbying campaign...
In this article: George W. Bush, Enron, Supreme Court, Plaintiff, Paul D. Clement, Securities and Exchange Commission, White House, and U.S. Chamber of Commerce
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www.washingtonpost.com | October 04, 2007
High Court's Fraud Case Widely Seen as Stand-In for Enron
...technology companies (Scientific-Atlanta and Motorola) for allegedly helping a St. Louis firm called Charter Communications inflate its revenue through a series of sham deals in 2000. A lower court ruled that because Scientific-Atlanta and...
In this article: Supreme Court, Enron, Plaintiff, Scientific-Atlanta, Securities and Exchange Commission, Motorola, and John G. Roberts Jr.
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The Hollywood Reporter | May 12, 2008
Charter cuts Q1 loss
...by high revenue-generating user growth Paul Allen-controlled cable operator Charter Communications narrowed its first-quarter loss as a revenue gain of 10.5% to $1.6 billion outpaced cost increases. The loss of $358 million was down from a...
In this article: Paul Allen, Joint venture, Sprint Nextel, and Charter Communications
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www.washingtonpost.com | August 05, 2008
Earnings: Charter Q2 In Line, Helped By Data And Telephony; Video Flat
...And Telephony; Video Flat Cable operator Charter Communications ( NSDQ: CHTR), which continues to maintain a tenuous hold on its listing status, reported Q2 revenue of $1.62 billion, for 8.9 percent from last year. The company is still...
In this article: Time Warner, Charter Communications, and NYSE
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Financial Times | September 30, 2007
US court to rule on third-party liability
...the court - has taken a business-friendly line. The case involves a cable company, Charter Communications, which inflated its revenues by using bogus transactions with two suppliers. Investors sued the suppliers claiming they...
In this article: US, Supreme Court, Plaintiff, SEC, Enron, Defendant, US Chamber Of Commerce, and Georgetown University Law Center
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www.washingtonpost.com | March 16, 2009
NATIONAL BRIEFING
...interest payments on its debt hampered profitability. The cable operator's revenue grew 6.6 percent to $1.66 billion, driven by growth in its phone and high-speed Internet services. For the full year, Charter's loss widened to $2.45...
In this article: Alcoa, Wal-Mart, Asset, Charter Communications, Pizza, Fortress Investment Group, Federal Communications Commission, Federal Reserve, and Paul Allen
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Mediaweek | May 06, 2009
Charter Grows Revenue in Q1, Adds Subs
...percent to $1.66 billion driven by increases in advanced services subscribers. The company boosted its revenue generating units by 149,600 during the quarter. It lost 22,200 basic cable customers, but added 25,600 digital video subscribers,...
In this article: Charter Communications, Pro forma, Bankruptcy, St. Louis, New York, and BlackBerry
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paidContent.org | February 10, 2008
Comcast Buys Rest Of Car Site Vehix
...overlap, if nothing else. The site shares its ad revenues with Comcast, Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) Cable, Charter Communications (NSDQ: CHTR), Bresnan Communications, CableOne and Mediacom Communications. Some more history of the service...
In this article: Comcast, Comcast Spotlight, Time Warner, Comcast Interactive Media, Bresnan Communications, Charter Communications, and NYSE
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Description from Wikipedia:
In business, revenue or revenues is income that a company receives from its normal business activities, usually from the sale of goods and services to customers. Some companies also receive revenue from interest, dividends or royalties paid to them by other companies. Revenue may refer to business income in general, or it may refer to the amount, in a monetary unit, received during a period of time, as in "Last year, Company X had revenue of $32 million."
In many countries, including the UK, revenue is referred to as turnover.
Profits or net income generally imply total revenue minus total expenses in a given period. In accounting and financial analysis, revenue is often referred to as the "top line" due to its position on the income statement at the very top. This is to be contrasted with the "bottom line" which denotes net income.
For non-profit organizations, annual revenue may be referred to as gross receipts. This revenue includes donations from individuals and corporations, support from government agencies, income from activities related to the organization's mission, and income from fundraising activities, membership dues, and financial investments such as stock shares in companies. For government, revenue includes gross proceeds from income taxes on companies and individuals, excise duties, customs duties, other taxes, sales of goods and services, dividends and interest.
In general usage, revenue is income received by an organization in the form of cash or cash equivalents. Sales revenue or revenues is income received from selling goods or services over a period of time. Tax revenue is income that a government receives from taxpayers.
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