Margaret Lake Diamonds Inc.

TSXV:DIA Stock Report

Market Cap: CA$758.6k

Margaret Lake Diamonds Past Earnings Performance

Past criteria checks 0/6

Margaret Lake Diamonds has been growing earnings at an average annual rate of 26.6%, while the Metals and Mining industry saw earnings growing at 25.3% annually.

Key information

26.6%

Earnings growth rate

62.2%

EPS growth rate

Metals and Mining Industry Growth27.4%
Revenue growth raten/a
Return on equityn/a
Net Marginn/a
Last Earnings Update31 May 2024

Recent past performance updates

No updates

Recent updates

Revenue & Expenses Breakdown

How Margaret Lake Diamonds makes and spends money. Based on latest reported earnings, on an LTM basis.


Earnings and Revenue History

TSXV:DIA Revenue, expenses and earnings (CAD Millions)
DateRevenueEarningsG+A ExpensesR&D Expenses
31 May 240-100
29 Feb 240-100
30 Nov 230-100
31 Aug 230-110
31 May 230-220
28 Feb 230-220
30 Nov 220-220
31 Aug 220-110
31 May 220010
28 Feb 220010
30 Nov 210000
31 Aug 210000
31 May 210000
28 Feb 210-100
30 Nov 200-100
31 Aug 200-100
31 May 200-100
29 Feb 200-400
30 Nov 190-400
31 Aug 190-400
31 May 190-400
28 Feb 190000
30 Nov 180000
31 Aug 180000
31 May 180000
28 Feb 180000
30 Nov 170000
31 Aug 170010
31 May 170-100
28 Feb 170-100
30 Nov 160-100
31 Aug 160-100
31 May 160000
29 Feb 160000
30 Nov 150000
31 Aug 150000
31 May 150000
28 Feb 150000
30 Nov 140000
31 Aug 140000
31 May 140000
28 Feb 140000

Quality Earnings: DIA is currently unprofitable.

Growing Profit Margin: DIA is currently unprofitable.


Free Cash Flow vs Earnings Analysis


Past Earnings Growth Analysis

Earnings Trend: DIA is unprofitable, but has reduced losses over the past 5 years at a rate of 26.6% per year.

Accelerating Growth: Unable to compare DIA's earnings growth over the past year to its 5-year average as it is currently unprofitable

Earnings vs Industry: DIA is unprofitable, making it difficult to compare its past year earnings growth to the Metals and Mining industry (2.8%).


Return on Equity

High ROE: DIA's liabilities exceed its assets, so it is difficult to calculate its Return on Equity.


Return on Assets


Return on Capital Employed


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