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EBITDA at other companies

Affirm Holdings, Inc. logo
Affirm Holdings, Inc.AFRM
Ladder Capital logo
Ladder CapitalLADR
Fidelity National Information Services logo
Fidelity National Information ServicesFIS
Global Payments logo
Global PaymentsGPN
Corpay logo
CorpayCPAY
Toast logo
ToastTOST

Other financials

Income statement

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Revenue$1.1B+25.7%
Gross profit$773.6M+26.3%
Net income$107.7M+28.8%
EPS (diluted)$2.43+29.9%

Balance sheet

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Cash & equivalents$130.7M-10.5%
Total debt$2.0B+0.3%
Total equity$2.3B+11.6%
Total assets$5.4B+21.1%

Cash flow

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Operating cash flow$153.6M+21.3%
CapEx$13.7M-19.5%
Free cash flow$132.8M+12.6%

Valuation

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Market cap$9.95B+53.5%
Enterprise value$11.86B+39.9%
P/E28.1×+5.0×
P/S2.6×+0.7×

Profitability

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Gross margin72.6%-0.5pp
Net margin9.1%+0.9pp
FCF margin14.5%+0.6pp

Returns & leverage

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Return on equity16.3%+2.6pp
Debt / equity0.9×-0.1×
Current ratio4.8×+0.4×

Where this comes from

Calculated from FirstCash Holdings’s reported figures.

$179.7Mebit+
$31.5MDepreciation Depletion & Amortization
=$211.17M

The official record: FirstCash Holdings’s 10-Q, filed April 24, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

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Questions, answered.

What is FirstCash Holdings's EBITDA?
FirstCash Holdings (FCFS) reported EBITDA of $211.17M in Q1 2026.
How has FirstCash Holdings's EBITDA changed year-over-year?
FirstCash Holdings's EBITDA increased by 28.6% year-over-year, from $164.19M to $211.17M.
What is the long-term trend for FirstCash Holdings's EBITDA?
Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), FirstCash Holdings's EBITDA has grown at a 29.1% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $244.79M to $680.66M.
What does EBITDA mean?
Operating cash profit before interest, taxes, and non-cash charges.
How do you interpret EBITDA?
Higher is better and widely used to value capital-intensive businesses, but it ignores the real cost of capex — pair it with free cash flow. (Defined as EBIT + D&A so EBITDA = EBIT + D&A holds exactly.)
How does EBITDA compare across companies?
Standard cross-company operating-profit proxy for non-financials; not meaningful for banks and insurers.