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Metrics explained · 6 min read

EPS growth explained for stock research

EPS growth shows how earnings per share are changing, but it needs context from revenue, margins, share count, and one-off items.

Published 2026-04-26Educational research support, not personal guidance.

What EPS growth measures

Earnings per share, or EPS, measures company profit allocated to each share. EPS growth compares that figure across periods, usually year over year or over multiple years.

EPS can grow because the company earns more profit, because margins improve, because the share count falls, or because one-time items affected the comparison period.

Why EPS growth matters

Sustained EPS growth can indicate that a business is scaling profitably. It often influences valuation because people researching companies tend to pay more for companies that can grow earnings consistently.

But EPS growth is not automatically high quality. It should be compared with revenue growth, cash flow, and the balance sheet.

Common distortions

Buybacks can increase EPS even if total profit is flat. Tax changes, asset sales, impairments, restructuring charges, and acquisition accounting can also distort year-over-year comparisons.

For cyclical companies, EPS growth may look dramatic when earnings recover from a low base.

How to use it in a research workflow

Use EPS growth as one indicator within a broader earnings quality review. Ask whether revenue is also growing, whether margins are stable or improving, and whether free cash flow supports reported earnings.

Key takeaway

EPS growth is useful, but only when paired with revenue quality, margins, cash flow, share count, and valuation context.