Earnings Per Share

Antidilutive Securities Excluded from EPS

Target Antidilutive Securities Excluded from EPS remained flat by 0.0% to 525K in Q4 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric grew by 320.0%, from 125K to 525K. Over 2 years (FY 2023 to FY 2025), Antidilutive Securities Excluded from EPS shows relatively stable performance with a 0.0% CAGR.

Analysis

StatementIncome Statement
SectionEarnings Per Share
CategoryOther
SignalContext dependent
VolatilityStable
First reportedQ1 2023
Last reportedQ4 2025Mar 11, 2026

How to read this metric

A high number of excluded antidilutive securities suggests that a significant portion of employee or convertible incentives are currently 'out of the money' relative to the current stock price.

Detailed definition

This metric quantifies the number of potential common shares, such as stock options or convertible securities, that are...

Peer comparison

Most public companies disclose this in the notes to the financial statements or the EPS reconciliation table, making it a standard metric for assessing potential future share dilution.

Metric ID: jnj_antidilutive_securities_excluded_from_eps

Historical Data

3 years
 FY'23FY'24FY'25
Value2.1M500K2.1M
YoY Change-76.2%+320.0%
Range500K2.1M
CAGR+0.0%
Avg YoY Growth+121.9%
Median YoY Growth+121.9%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Target's antidilutive securities excluded from eps?
Target (TGT) reported antidilutive securities excluded from eps of 525K in Q4 2025.
How has Target's antidilutive securities excluded from eps changed year-over-year?
Target's antidilutive securities excluded from eps increased by 320.0% year-over-year, from 125K to 525K.
What is the long-term trend for Target's antidilutive securities excluded from eps?
Over 2 years (2023 to 2025), Target's antidilutive securities excluded from eps has grown at a 0.0% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 2.1M to 2.1M.
What does antidilutive securities excluded from eps mean?
The number of potential shares that are left out of the diluted earnings per share calculation because they would currently improve, rather than reduce, the earnings per share figure.