Rebecca Diamond

Rebecca Diamond

Rebecca Diamond headshot

Rebecca Diamond joined FOX Business Network as a co-host in September 2007. She currently serves as a business correspondent for FOX News Channel (FNC), providing daily market updates and regularly appearing on Your World with Neil Cavuto and the Cost of Freedom business block on Saturdays.

Diamond joined FNC as a news update anchor when the network launched in 1996. She later served a Los Angeles-based correspondent and was then named a New York-based correspondent in February 2003. In this position she provided regular updates on the war in Iraq.

Prior to her tenure at FNC, Diamond worked as an anchor/reporter for Lifetime Television and as a business writer for The Associated Press. She also worked as a reporter/anchor for local affiliate television stations in McAllen, Texas; Phoenix, Arizona; and San Diego, California.

She is a graduate of the University of Maryland's College of Journalism and is a San Jose, California native.

 

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Profit Margin

Ever been to a clearance sale at a department store and wonder how a massive store like Macy's or Saks can have 50%, 60%, or even 75%-off sales and still remain in business? Ever wonder why that piece of cloth that an Italian designer calls a dress can be worth $2,400, and how much it really costs to make and sell?

Ladies and gentlemen, let's talk profit margin. Profit margin is the difference between how much it costs a company to manufacture, transport and sell its products, and how much it sells them for. If a company made $10 million in profit of sales of $100 million, the profit margin is 10%. You get that number by dividing the profit ($10 million) by the income ($100 million). Usually you'll hear profit margin as a percentage.

The profit margin is a great way to tell how well a company is run. If you have a high profit margin in a company, that means that the company's costs to make the product are low and it can withstand changes in price fairly well. Also you can use profit margin to tell how well a company is run when you look at similar companies.

Let's say you were looking a two candy companies. One has a profit margin of 15%, off $200 million in sales. The other company has a profit margin of 7% off $400 million in sales. The $400 million candy company's profit margin shows the company is having trouble keeping costs down. It might be spending too much money on their CEO's private jet, or their sugar suppliers aren't as good as they could be. Anyway, if investors were looking at the $400 million candy company, they would be asking some serious questions.