(Ekonomi) In economics & business, specifically cost accounting, the break-even point (BEP) is the point at which cost or expenses and revenue are equal: there is no net loss or gain, and one has "broken even". A profit or a loss has not been made, although opportunity costs have been paid, and capital has received the risk-adjusted, expected return
(Ekonomi) In economics & business, specifically cost accounting, the break-even point (BEP) is the point at which cost or expenses and revenue are equal: there is no net loss or gain, and one has "broken even". A profit or a loss has not been made, although opportunity costs have been paid, and capital has received the risk-adjusted, expected return
The point of business activity when total revenue equals total expenses Above the break-even point, the business is making a profit Below the break-even point, the business is incurring a loss
The point at which an option buyer or seller experiences no loss and no profit on an option Call breakeven equals the strike price plus the premium Put breakeven equals the strike price minus the premium
The volume of business required to produces a revenue stream that covers costs Below this level the venture loses money and above it should make money However, it should be noted that the assumption is that the business is driven by scale Sales are considered to be of equal value
= the situation where costs are equal to revenues There are several types of situations where the idea of break-even are implied The ommon ones are the length of time an activity is expected to earn sufficient revenue to cover costs, another is the amount of product and revenue required to cover costs See NOP Number of Periods calculations
The point where the dollars out equal dollars in, in a promotion; at this point the piece has generated enough money to cover the cost of the promotion
(Ticaret) An examination of changes in fixed and variable costs based on varying revenue and production levels that identifies a break-even point where revenues are equal to costs. It highlights the profit results from alternative levels of operation. (syn: cost-profit-volume analysis)
The point where total revenue equals total costs; the point of zero profits See also: Income Statement (IS) Topic areas: Fundraising and Financial Sustainability
When a company reaches break-even point, the money it makes from the sale of goods or services is just enough to cover the cost of supplying those goods or services, but not enough to make a profit. `Terminator 2' finally made $200 million, which was considered to be the break-even point for the picture
The output of the standard break-even analysis The unit sales volumes or actual sales amounts that a company needs to equal its running expense rate and not lose or make money in a given month The formula for break-even point in units is: The formula for break-even point in sales amount is: =Regular running costs/(1-(Unit Variable Cost/Unit Price)) This should not be confused with the recovering initial investment through the regular operation of a business That concept, often confused with break-even, is called the payback period see break-even analysis for more background For more on this, see the discussion on break-even analysis in the free online book Hurdle: the Book on Business Planning
The break-even point in any business is that point at which the volume of sales or revenues exactly equals total expenses -- the point at which there is neither a profit nor loss -- under varying levels of activity The break-even point tells the manager
The point at which revenues and total costs are equal A combination of sales and costs that will yield a no-profit, no-loss situation, also known as Break-Even Sales
Refers to the price at which a transaction produces neither a gain nor a loss In the context of options, the term has the additional definitions: 1 Long calls and short uncovered calls: strike price plus premium 2 Long puts and short uncovered puts: strike price minus premium 3 Short covered call: purchase price minus premium 4 Short put covered by short stock: short sale price of underlying stock plus premium
In an HMO, the membership level at which total revenues and total expenditures are equal, thereby producing neither a net gain nor loss from operations
The volume of sales required so that the total revenue and total costs are equal A commonly used formula to calculate the Breakeven Point is Sales Revenue = Total Fixed Costs/Gross Margin