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25 Sentences With "showing a profit"

How to use showing a profit in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "showing a profit" and check conjugation/comparative form for "showing a profit". Mastering all the usages of "showing a profit" from sentence examples published by news publications.

His businesses typically require years of upfront investment before showing a profit.
Six years later, Groupon hasn't mastered showing a profit while keeping its revenue stable.
Earlier, Amazon reported its second quarter earnings showing a profit of just $197 million.
Add on $100m for the launcher, and the satellite may not start showing a profit for a decade.
Citigroup also reported Wednesday morning, showing a profit of $1.14 a share against estimates of $1.12, though revenues missed.
Worse yet, only 1 percent are showing a profit in what has been a tough year for the market.
Amazon reported its second quarter earnings today, showing a profit of just $197 million on strong sales of $38 billion.
LJUBLJANA, March 19 (Reuters) - Slovenia's pharmaceutical producer Krka revised up its preliminary group net profit to 244.3 million euros ($266.41 million) for 2019 on Friday, following an estimate released in January showing a profit of 242 million euros.
Gary Seferian, a senior vice president at the Banc of California, said his bank gave Manafort the $1 million loan to rehabilitate and flip properties in the Los Angeles area, in part based on a financial statement for DMP International showing a profit of more than $4 million for 2015.
The second international match against England took place in May 1928, with Scotland winning 3–2 and showing a profit of £446.7.0 (£446.35).
From A Bare Hull: How To Build A Sailboat, by Ferenc Máté. W. W. Norton & Company; Revised edition, 2000. Also see "The Finely Fitted Yacht" by the same author. The Vicks' business inexperience, and lax production efficiency, meant that despite technically showing a profit, the company struggled to stay solvent.
Harrison struggled to keep the railroad afloat during the Great Depression, and by 1936 Southern was once again showing a profit. Harrison retired in 1937, intending to focus on his hobby of writing about historical subjects including the roots of the American Thoroughbred horse, but he died three months later in February 1938.
Few people owned FM radios in the early 1950s. By 1952, WKY management had to make a decision about keeping the FM station on the air or increasing the power of the company's new television tower. Since WKY-FM was not showing a profit, it lost out. WKY-FM donated its transmitter and other equipment to the Oklahoma City Public School District and signed off.
In the late 1960s a different KTBT was on-air in Garden Grove, CA at 94.3; with a format of Acid-Rock the World's First Acid-Rock Station; owned by Tel-Audio Incorporated. The owner used the station as a tax write-off; and every time it began showing a profit, he changed the format. It later was sold and became KIKF country 94.3.
Legal capital is a concept used in UK company law, EU company law, and various other corporate law jurisdictions to refer to the sum of assets contributed to a company by shareholders when they are issued shares. The law often requires that this capital is maintained, and that dividends are not paid when a company is not showing a profit above the level of historically recorded legal capital.
Many regions of Papua New Guinea are not yet connected by roads, so air service is not just a privilege of the elite, but a necessary infrastructure for development, i.e. transporting heavy payloads in and out of remote regions. Air Niugini, which had been running at a loss, was showing a profit by the time Okuk tabled the financial report in September 1981. He was a steadfast opponent of the provincial government system and the excesses created by having 600 paid politicians governing a nation of three million people.
His newspaper gave its reader a steady diet of coverage of celebrities, sports, and gossip, with illustrations of pro wrestlers and women in bathing suits. Boddy mocked Hearst and Chandler in his pages, and often embarrassed the powerful, once displaying a photograph of a city official picking his nose. By 1929, the Daily News was showing a profit, and three years later, amid the Depression, began publishing a broadsheet edition, raising its price from two to three cents. Boddy said that with a circulation of 150,000, the paper was profitable even without advertising.
598 Recognizing that there was little chance of the project showing a profit, Anthony paid Stanton and Gage for their shares of the rights to the books. She issued Volume 3 in 1886, listing herself as publisher. She also bought the plates of Volumes 1 and 2, which had already been published, from Fowler and Wells, the publisher, and reprinted them in 1887, again listing herself as publisher. Anthony gave away over 1000 copies at her own expense, mailing them to political leaders and libraries in the U.S. and Europe.
The Royal Mining Company found some copper but more iron and soon exhausted its funds and the directors' patience. The SAMA abandoned the mine in 1869 without it ever showing a profit. By 1867 the price of copper had dropped to £70 per ton; so low that digging the ore out was no longer profitable. An English expert, John Darlington, came out in 1868 and recommended that what had been a series of underground mines should be opened out to become an open-cut mine in order to recover at low cost the lower grade ore.
A new company was formed in 1932 called the South Shields Greyhound Stadium Ltd with the intention to construct a greyhound track around the pitch. The final expenditure for the build went considerably over budget. The first race meeting took place on Saturday 11 March 1933 under the National Greyhound Racing Club rules of racing with the Managing Director listed as Mr S J Hawes, the General Manager was R Gilfillan and the Racing Manager was Major H Carew. On 31 October the initial accounts were released showing a profit of £1,631 despite bank debenture loan repayments of £3,431 and income tax of £800.
Wooten, Heather. A Food Systems Assessment for Oakland, CA: Toward a Sustainable Food Plan. Oakland Mayor’s Office of Sustainability, University of California, Berkeley, Department of City and Regional Planning. June 21, 2006 The Food Systems Assessment Report for Oakland suggested the creation of Food Retail Enterprise Zones, whereby food retailers that provide nutritious foods in poor neighborhoods are exempt from Oakland business taxes. It also suggested programs, like the Green Business certification program could award “Green and Healthy Oakland” certification to retail establishments that stock food or offer menu items conforming to specific criteria (fresh, nutritious, local, etc.) Market leaders close urban stores, even if they are showing a profit, to focus on the most productive stores in the suburbs.
The company was operated at a loss. A 2001 report by the Cour des ComptesLes industries d'armement: rapport au Président de la République suivis des réponses des administrations et des organismes concernés , Cour des Comptes, La Documentation Française, 2001 and a 2002 report by the National AssemblyRapport d'information déposé par la commission de la défense nationale et des forces armées sur la situation de Giat Industries, "Report from the defense and armed forces commission on the situation of Giat Industries", presented by Yves Fromion and Jean Diébold, French National Assembly, 2002 described the situation as critical. Not until April 2004 did the board of directors present the public with a financial statement showing a profit of several hundred million Euros. This was mainly due to increased export sales, and the modernization of the Leclerc Main Battle Tank (MBT) and several other armored platforms.
Many other local authorities had been engaging in interest rate swaps in the 1980s.Duncan Campbell-Smith, "Follow the Money: The Audit Commission, Public Money, and the Management of Public Services 1983-2008", Allen Lane, 2008, chapter 6 passim. This resulted in several cases in which the banks generally lost their claims for compound interest on debts to councils, finalised in Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington London Borough Council.[1996] UKHL 12, [1996] AC 669 Banks did, however, recover some funds where the derivatives were "in the money" for the Councils (ie, an asset showing a profit for the council, which it now had to return to the bank, not a debt) The controversy surrounding interest rate swaps reached a peak in the UK during the financial crisis where banks sold unsuitable interest rate hedging products on a large scale to SMEs.
The NFL's struggle against the AAFC generated stress on wages,Lyons: 129; cf. Davis 2005: 203–204 attendance,Coenen: 125–126 marketing,Coenen: 125 and by 1949, it had prevented the NFL for showing a profit for three consecutive years.Lyons: 171 Bell and representatives from both leagues met to attempt a merger, but their efforts were fruitless.Piascik: 125; cf. Lyons: 146 In an unrelated matter, he apprised the owners that attendance records had shown televising games locally had a negative impact on the sale of home tickets.Coenen: 154 Nevertheless, he actualized the NFL's first television contractRuck; Patterson and Weber: 290—the 1949 championship game.Lyons: 156–157 Simultaneously, he dealt with a lawsuit from Bill Radovich, who had been blacklisted for leaving the Lions and gaining employment with the AAFC.Lyons and the New York Times incorrectly list Radovich for playing with the Los Angeles Seals. U.S. House Committee III, 1957, pp. 2778–2779; cf.
The Il-18 was later replaced by two Douglas DC-4s which were purchased from Alaska Airlines, and the airline also obtained four LASA-60s. By mid-1963 the Air Guinée fleet comprised six Avia-14s, three Ilyushin Il-18s, two Douglas DC-4s, two LASA-60s, one Aero 145, one Mil Mi-14 helicopter, five Yakovlev Yak-18s, three Antonov An-2s and one Yodel. In 1965 Pan American World Airways was contracted to provide technical personnel and a DC-4 for the airlines' use; however, the agreement did not last for long, and the Soviets returned to the airline, supplying an Antonov An-24 for delivery in 1966-1967. In December 1965, the airline temporarily suspended operations as only one route was showing a profit, and the aircraft were suffering frequent breakdowns. On 9 July 1967 one of the airline's Il-18s was written off in an accident at Casablanca.

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