Shareholder Yield (Cash Flow from Financing) (%)

Metadata

  • Id: shareholder_yield_cff
  • Type: fundamentals
  • Subtype: ratios
  • Units: percentage
  • Decimal Points: 2
  • Currency Convertible: No

Description

Shareholder yield (cash flow from financing) is a measure of how much cash a company returns to its shareholders through dividends, share buybacks, and debt reduction. It shows how much return investors can expect from investing in a company based on its cash flow from financing activities. Cash flow from financing activities is the net amount of cash that a company receives or pays for issuing or repaying debt and equity. The formula for shareholder yield (cash flow from financing) is:
Shareholder yield (cash flow from financing) = (Trailing 12-month cash flow from financing / Market capitalization) * 100
Where: - Trailing 12-month cash flow from financing is TM020, ttm_cff - Market capitalization is R0066, market_cap When trailing 12-month cash flow from financing is negative (positive), the ratio returns positive (negative).