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Ventia Services Group (ASX:VNT) Retained Earnings : A$232 Mil (As of Dec. 2023)


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What is Ventia Services Group Retained Earnings?

Retained earnings is the accumulated portion of net income that is not distributed to shareholders. Ventia Services Group's retained earnings for the quarter that ended in Dec. 2023 was A$232 Mil.

Ventia Services Group's quarterly retained earnings increased from Dec. 2022 (A$181 Mil) to Jun. 2023 (A$200 Mil) and increased from Jun. 2023 (A$200 Mil) to Dec. 2023 (A$232 Mil).

Ventia Services Group's annual retained earnings increased from Dec. 2021 (A$64 Mil) to Dec. 2022 (A$181 Mil) and increased from Dec. 2022 (A$181 Mil) to Dec. 2023 (A$232 Mil).


Ventia Services Group Retained Earnings Historical Data

The historical data trend for Ventia Services Group's Retained Earnings can be seen below:

* For Operating Data section: All numbers are indicated by the unit behind each term and all currency related amount are in USD.
* For other sections: All numbers are in millions except for per share data, ratio, and percentage. All currency related amount are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.

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Ventia Services Group Retained Earnings Chart

Ventia Services Group Annual Data
Trend Dec21 Dec22 Dec23
Retained Earnings
64.10 181.40 231.60

Ventia Services Group Semi-Annual Data
Dec21 Jun22 Dec22 Jun23 Dec23
Retained Earnings 64.10 158.10 181.40 200.20 231.60

Ventia Services Group Retained Earnings Calculation

Retained Earnings is the accumulated portion of net income that is not distributed to shareholders. Because the net income was not distributed to shareholders, shareholders' equity is increased by the same amount.

Of course, if a company loses, it is called retained losses, or accumulated losses.


Ventia Services Group  (ASX:VNT) Retained Earnings Explanation

Historically profitable companies sometimes have negative retained earnings. This is because they have cumulatively paid out more to shareholders than they reported in profits.

For example, in 2011, Microsoft had negative retained earnings. This does not mean the company lost more money than it made over the years. It just means it paid out more money than it earned.

If a company has negative retained earnings, investors should check the 10-year financial results. They should not assume that negative retained earnings prove a company has generally lost money in the past.

Of course, many companies with negative retained earnings have indeed lost money in the past.

Retained Earnings: Warren Buffett's Secret.

One of the most important indicators of durable competitive advantage. Net earnings can be paid out as dividends, used to buy back shares or retained for growth.

If the company loses more than it has accumulated, retained earnings is negative.

If a company isn't adding to its retained earnings, it isn't growing its net worth.

Rate of growth of retained earnings is good indicator whether it's benefiting from a competitive advantage.

Microsoft is negative because it chose to buyback stock and pay dividends.

The more earnings retained, the faster it grows and increases growth rate for future earnings.


Ventia Services Group (ASX:VNT) Business Description

Traded in Other Exchanges
Address
80 Pacific Highway, Level 8, North Sydney, Sydney, NSW, AUS, 2060
While Ventia is not the largest player with an estimated 7.5% share of addressable markets, it is a leading infrastructure maintenance services provider in Australia and New Zealand. Its capabilities span the full asset lifecycle including operations and maintenance, facilities management, minor capital works, environmental services, and other solutions. And its business model is favorably capital-light via flexing of a large contractor base complementing a deep pool of talented employees. Ventia has long-term relationships with a diverse range of public and private sector clients with many client relationships maintained for decades. Contracts are favorably long with an average five-year duration at inception and most containing some form of embedded price escalation.