Definition
Earnings quality evaluates whether reported profits are sustainable, cash-backed, and free from manipulation. High-quality earnings are recurring, generated from core operations, and closely track operating cash flow. Red flags include large accruals, frequent one-time adjustments, aggressive revenue recognition, and persistent gaps between earnings and cash flow.
lightbulb Example
Company A reports $10M earnings with $12M operating cash flow—high quality. Company B reports $10M earnings but only $3M cash flow, with the gap driven by rising receivables and capitalizing expenses—low quality, warranting investigation.
Companies with persistently lower cash flow than reported earnings may be managing earnings aggressively.
verified_user Key Points
- Cash flow backing is the primary quality indicator
- Large accruals relative to earnings are a warning sign
- Frequency of "one-time" adjustments suggests manipulation
- Beneish M-Score can quantify manipulation probability