The owner’s statement
You do not own a ticker; you own a fraction of a business. Enter the shares you hold and this page states what that fraction owns, from each company’s own filings: your share of the revenue, the owner earnings, the profit, the equity, and the debt. Your holdings stay on this device — no account, nothing stored with us.
| Company | Shares | Your price | Return on capital | Revenue | Owner earnings | Profit | Net debt |
|---|
No holdings entered yet. Add one above; everything stays on this device.
Holdings live on this device only. to keep or move them; pasting a copied list into the ticker box restores it.
Figures are each company’s freshest reported figures — the trailing twelve months where the filer stitches them, the latest annual filing otherwise, dated on every row — times your fraction (your shares over the filed share count); your equity is the filed book value per share times your shares. A figure the filing doesn’t carry stays a dash, and totals say how many holdings they cover. The return column is each business’s through-cycle median return on invested capital (a bank shows its normalized return on tangible equity, the lens a bank is read on), with the compound annual per-share growth over the filed record beneath it. The earlier-count line under a fraction restates the record’s starting share count on today’s split-adjusted basis. Where the profit shows a paid-out and retained split, the paid-out half is the year’s dividends paid times your fraction — an attribution on the filed year, not cash you received — and the retained half is the remainder the businesses kept working on your behalf. The averaged owner earnings are the last three filed years. The look-through return on equity is your profit over your equity, summed only across holdings carrying both; the owner-earnings yield names the sum of your own prices it is computed on. Each per-currency statement is as filed, never converted; the combined statement converts at the dated reference rates it names — reference rates, not quotes. Nothing on this page is a recommendation; what to own, and at what price, is the reader’s judgment.
“We also believe that investors can benefit by focusing on their own look-through earnings. To calculate these, they should determine the underlying earnings attributable to the shares they hold in their portfolio and total these.” — Warren Buffett, 1991 letter to shareholders.