FOX Translator

Detach

No data currently available.

No data currently available.

Free Cash Flow

Just as your pulse is checked during a routine physical, free cash flow is used as an indicator of a company's health. It equals the cash brought in from operations minus the money needed to pay the bills. Think about leftover money in your checking account after you pay this month's bills.

Investors and analysts see this leftover money as a gauge of a company's ability to perform. It is available for transactions such as handing out dividends and working on new products.

Some argue free cash flow is wrongly overshadowed by the emphasis often placed on earnings. Earnings numbers can be manipulated and don't always tell the whole story -- and earnings don't mean much if there's nothing left over after a company pays its expenses. Even if you bring in a six-figure salary, but no money left after paying the bills, are you in great financial shape?

You don't have to be Einstein to figure out free cash flow. To calculate the number, subtract the company's expenditures and dividends from its operating cash flow.

If the free cash flow is written in red ink, it doesn't necessarily signal curtains. This is common for young companies looking to grow. It also could be a result of heavy investments, which in the long run could be worth a standing ovation.

Home / Markets / Industries / Finance

Bradford & Bingley To Enlarge Rights Issue As TPG Withdraws

 
Simon Kennedy
MarketWatch Pulse
 

LONDON -- Stricken U.K. mortgage bank Bradford & Bingley said late Thursday that private equity group TPG Capital has withdrawn from a deal to inject cash, but that major shareholders will still back a 400 million pound ($793 million) capital raising. The bank said TPG withdrew after rating agency Moody's downgraded the group's long-term debt ratings to Baa1 from A3. The private equity firm had been planning to inject 179 million pounds in return for a 23% stake, with a rights issue bringing the total cash injection to 400 million pounds. But Bradford & Bingley said the cash shortfall will be covered through an enlarged rights issue, which is supported by a number of its largest shareholders, including M&G Investment Managers, Legal & General Investment Management and Standard Life. The price of the rights issue will be unchanged at 55 pence a share.

Copyright © 2008 MarketWatch, Inc.

 
 

Market Snapshot

Symbol Last Price Netchange Volume
-- -- -- --
-- -- -- --
-- -- -- --
-- -- -- --
-- -- -- --