Not all companies pay dividends, but when they do, you should say "Cha-ching!" Dividends are payments the company makes to their shareholders. They're a way of giving the shareholder a piece of the profit pie.
Put your dividend dinero into a percentage: a $1 annual dividend for a $10 stock has a 10% yield.
This is the amount of money earned per every one share. If the company made $1 million in profits and has 1 million shares outstanding, the EPS would be $1.
Think of this as debt, but then cast the net a little wider. Liability is the obligation to repay its loans, IOUs, payroll, leases, pensions, vacation hours, and taxes a company owes.
Stocks work hard for the money, so hard for it honey—ahem. P/E ratio is "price-to-earnings": it tells you how much you’re paying for the earnings that a share is generating. For those of you who are visual learners, P/E Ratio = price per share / earnings.
If you're expecting a dividend check and end up empty-handed, it could be because the company decided to keep the earnings and put them back into the business. This money, and all other earnings the company keeps, are called retained earnings. The amount of a company's retained earnings can be found in the shareholders' equity section of the balance sheet.

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