Corporate Profits
Quarterly | |
---|---|
Q3 2024 (Preliminary) | -0.3% |
Q2 2024 | +3.6% |
Annual | |
---|---|
2023 | +6.9% |
2022 | +7.8% |
Note: Corporate profits are not available with the first (advance) estimate of GDP for each quarter. For the fourth quarter only, corporate profits are not available in the first or second estimates.
- Current release: November 27, 2024
- Next release: December 19, 2024
Corporate profits represents the portion of the total income earned from current production that is accounted for by U.S. corporations. The estimates of corporate profits are an integral part of the national income and product accounts (NIPAs), a set of accounts prepared by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) that provides a logical and consistent framework for presenting statistics on U.S. economic activity.
Corporate profits is one of the most closely watched U.S. economic indicators. Profitability provides a summary measure of corporate financial health and thus serves as an essential indicator of economic performance. Profits are a source of retained earnings, providing much of the funding for capital investments that raise productive capacity. The estimates of profits and of related measures may also be used to evaluate the effects on corporations of changes in policy or in economic conditions.
- Paper: Prototype NIPA Estimates of Profits for S Corporations
May 2021 - Paper: Quasi-Corporations and Institutional Sectors in the U.S. National Accounts
July 2016 - BEA Briefing: The Effects of Corporate Inversions on the International and National Economic Accounts
Survey of Current Business, February 2015 - BEA Briefing: Comparing NIPA Profits With S&P 500 Profits
Survey of Current Business, March 2011 - BEA Briefing: Employee Stock Options and the National Economic Accounts
Survey of Current Business, February 2008 - Paper: NIPA Corporate Profits and Reported Earnings: A Comparison and Measurement Issues
January 2004
What are Corporate Profits?
Corporations' combined earnings from current production, with breakdowns by industry. These statistics are closely watched as a summary of corporate America's financial health and as an important U.S. economic indicator.
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Kate Pinard