Key Takeaways
- Basic EPS divides profit attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares for the period.
- IAS 33.4A requires every entity whose ordinary shares are publicly traded to present basic EPS on the face of the statement of profit or loss.
- Share issues, buybacks, and bonus elements mid-year change the weighted average denominator and require date-specific tracking.
- Getting the denominator wrong by even a few weeks overstates or understates EPS, which directly affects analyst valuations and price-earnings multiples.
What is Earnings per Share (Basic)?
IAS 33.10 defines the numerator as profit or loss attributable to the ordinary equity holders of the parent entity. The preparer starts with profit after tax from the income statement and deducts any preference dividends (whether declared or not, for cumulative preference shares) to arrive at the figure attributable to ordinary shareholders. IAS 33.14 is specific: only dividends on non-cumulative preference shares that were declared during the period reduce the numerator, while cumulative preference dividends reduce the numerator regardless of declaration.
The denominator is the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the period (IAS 33.19). Shares count from the date the consideration is receivable, which for a new issue is typically the issue date. If the entity buys back shares, those shares drop out of the weighted average from the repurchase date. IAS 33.26 requires retrospective adjustment of the denominator for bonus issues, share splits, and reverse splits because these events change the number of shares without changing the entity's resources. That retrospective adjustment applies to all prior periods presented, not just the current year. On the audit side, ISA 520.5 treats EPS as an analytical procedure input, so an incorrect calculation can cascade into flawed analytical procedures and missed misstatements elsewhere.
Worked example: Schaefer Elektrotechnik AG
Client: German electronics company, FY2025, revenue €310M, IFRS reporter. Schaefer has 20 million ordinary shares outstanding at 1 January 2025. On 1 April 2025, Schaefer issues 4 million new ordinary shares at €15 per share for cash. On 1 October 2025, Schaefer repurchases 1 million ordinary shares under a buyback programme. Profit after tax for FY2025 is €18.6M. Schaefer has no preference shares outstanding.
Step 1 — Determine the numerator
Profit after tax is €18.6M. Schaefer has no preference shares, so no deduction is required. The numerator for basic EPS is €18.6M.
Documentation note: record the profit after tax per the income statement, confirm the absence of preference shares by reference to the share register and articles of association, and cross-reference to the IAS 33.12 numerator requirements.
Step 2 — Calculate the weighted average number of ordinary shares
1 January to 31 March (3 months): 20 million shares for 3/12 = 5.0 million. 1 April to 30 September (6 months): 24 million shares (20M + 4M issued) for 6/12 = 12.0 million. 1 October to 31 December (3 months): 23 million shares (24M minus 1M repurchased) for 3/12 = 5.75 million. Weighted average = 5.0M + 12.0M + 5.75M = 22.75 million shares.
Documentation note: record each tranche with the date of the share movement, the number of shares, and the time-weighting fraction. Obtain board resolutions for the April issue and the October buyback. Cross-reference share counts to the share register at each movement date per IAS 33.20.
Step 3 — Compute basic EPS
€18.6M divided by 22.75 million shares = €0.82 per share.
Documentation note: record the final EPS calculation, note that IAS 33.66 requires disclosure of both the numerator and denominator, and verify that the figure presented on the face of the statement of profit or loss matches the working paper.
Step 4 — Check for bonus elements
The April share issue was at €15, which equals the market price on the issue date. No bonus element exists, so no retrospective adjustment to prior-period comparatives is required under IAS 33.26. If the shares had been issued below market price (a rights issue), the preparer would need to calculate the bonus fraction and restate the prior-period denominator.
Documentation note: record the market price on the issue date (source: Frankfurt Stock Exchange closing price on 1 April 2025), confirm no discount to market, and conclude that IAS 33.26 does not apply to this issuance.
Conclusion: basic EPS of €0.82 is defensible because the numerator ties to audited profit after tax, the denominator reflects date-specific weighting of each share movement, and the absence of a bonus element in the April issue has been verified against market data.
Why it matters in practice
- Teams frequently fail to time-weight the denominator correctly when share movements occur mid-period. IAS 33.20 requires shares to enter the weighted average from the date consideration is receivable. Using the full-year share count instead of the weighted average overstates the denominator and understates EPS. The error is most common when multiple share movements occur in a single period and the preparer rounds to quarterly periods rather than tracking exact dates.
- Cumulative preference dividends are sometimes omitted from the numerator adjustment when the board has not declared a dividend for the period. IAS 33.14(a) requires deduction of the full-year cumulative preference dividend regardless of declaration. Omitting this deduction overstates the profit attributable to ordinary shareholders and inflates basic EPS.
Basic EPS vs. diluted EPS
| Dimension | Basic EPS (IAS 33.10–29) | Diluted EPS (IAS 33.30–63) |
|---|---|---|
| Denominator | Weighted average of ordinary shares actually outstanding | Weighted average adjusted for all dilutive potential ordinary shares (options, convertibles, contingently issuable shares) |
| Numerator adjustment | Deduct preference dividends only | Deduct preference dividends, then add back interest on dilutive convertible debt (net of tax) and other effects of assumed conversion |
| Purpose | Reflects the actual capital structure during the period | Shows the worst-case dilution if all potential shares converted |
| When they diverge | When the entity has outstanding share options, convertible instruments, or contingently issuable shares with a dilutive effect | Same triggers; if no dilutive instruments exist, diluted EPS equals basic EPS |
The distinction matters because analysts use both figures to assess valuation. A wide gap between basic and diluted EPS signals that conversion of outstanding instruments would materially reduce per-share returns. IAS 33.66 requires both figures to be presented with equal prominence on the face of the income statement, so the auditor verifies that neither figure is buried in the notes while the other is presented on the face.
Related terms
Frequently asked questions
How do I adjust basic EPS for a bonus issue or share split?
IAS 33.26 requires retrospective adjustment of the weighted average denominator for all periods presented. A 2-for-1 bonus issue on 1 July 2025 doubles the denominator for the full current year and all comparative periods. The adjustment reflects that the number of shares changed without any inflow of resources. Disclose the nature of the adjustment per IAS 33.64(d).
Does basic EPS include treasury shares?
No. IAS 33.20 excludes treasury shares from the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding. When an entity repurchases its own shares, those shares leave the denominator from the repurchase date. If the entity reissues treasury shares later, they re-enter the weighted average from the reissue date. IAS 32.33 governs the balance sheet treatment of treasury shares as a deduction from equity.
Is basic EPS required for non-listed entities?
IAS 33.2 limits the mandatory scope to entities whose ordinary or potential ordinary shares are traded in a public market (or that are in the process of listing). A private company preparing IFRS financial statements is not required to present EPS. If it chooses to do so voluntarily, it must follow IAS 33 in full (IAS 33.3).