
Partner Communications Company Ltd
F:PUG

Profitability Summary
Partner Communications Company Ltd's profitability score is 47/100. We take all the information about a company's profitability (such as its margins, capital efficiency, free cash flow generating ability, and more) and consolidate it into one single number - the profitability score. The higher the profitability score, the more profitable the company is.

Score
We take all the information about a company's profitability (such as its margins, capital efficiency, free cash flow generating ability, and more) and consolidate it into one single number - the profitability score. The higher the profitability score, the more profitable the company is.
We take all the information about a company's profitability (such as its margins, capital efficiency, free cash flow generating ability, and more) and consolidate it into one single number - the profitability score. The higher the profitability score, the more profitable the company is.

Score

Score
Margins
Profit margins represent what percentage of sales has turned into profits. Simply put, the percentage figure indicates how many cents of profit the company has generated for each dollar of sale.
Profit margins help investors assess if a company's management is generating enough profit from its sales and whether operating costs and overhead costs are being contained.
Earnings Waterfall
Partner Communications Company Ltd
Revenue
|
3.3B
ILS
|
Cost of Revenue
|
-2.6B
ILS
|
Gross Profit
|
778m
ILS
|
Operating Expenses
|
-485m
ILS
|
Operating Income
|
293m
ILS
|
Other Expenses
|
-103m
ILS
|
Net Income
|
190m
ILS
|
Margins Comparison
Partner Communications Company Ltd Competitors
Country | Company | Market Cap |
Gross Margin |
Operating Margin |
Net Margin |
||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IL |
![]() |
Partner Communications Company Ltd
F:PUG
|
670m EUR |
23%
|
9%
|
6%
|
|
ZA |
V
|
Vodacom Group Ltd
JSE:VOD
|
252.1B Zac |
61%
|
22%
|
11%
|
|
US |
![]() |
T-Mobile US Inc
NASDAQ:TMUS
|
255.4B USD |
64%
|
23%
|
14%
|
|
ZA |
M
|
MTN Group Ltd
JSE:MTN
|
232B Zac |
70%
|
19%
|
-5%
|
|
CN |
![]() |
China Mobile Ltd
SSE:600941
|
1.5T CNY |
29%
|
14%
|
13%
|
|
IN |
![]() |
Bharti Airtel Ltd
NSE:BHARTIARTL
|
11T INR |
68%
|
28%
|
19%
|
|
JP |
![]() |
SoftBank Group Corp
TSE:9984
|
12.9T JPY |
52%
|
10%
|
16%
|
|
JP |
![]() |
SoftBank Corp
TSE:9434
|
10.3T JPY |
48%
|
15%
|
8%
|
|
JP |
![]() |
KDDI Corp
TSE:9433
|
9.6T JPY |
42%
|
18%
|
12%
|
|
MX |
![]() |
America Movil SAB de CV
BMV:AMXB
|
986.4B MXN |
43%
|
21%
|
4%
|
|
UK |
![]() |
Vodafone Group PLC
LSE:VOD
|
19.8B GBP |
33%
|
11%
|
-11%
|
Return on Capital
Return on capital ratios give a sense of how well a company is using its capital (equity, assets, capital employed, etc.) to generate profits (operating income, net income, etc.). In simple words, these ratios show how much income is generated for each dollar of capital invested.




Return on Capital Comparison
Partner Communications Company Ltd Competitors
Country | Company | Market Cap | ROE | ROA | ROCE | ROIC | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IL |
![]() |
Partner Communications Company Ltd
F:PUG
|
670m EUR |
10%
|
4%
|
8%
|
6%
|
|
ZA |
V
|
Vodacom Group Ltd
JSE:VOD
|
252.1B Zac |
18%
|
7%
|
19%
|
15%
|
|
US |
![]() |
T-Mobile US Inc
NASDAQ:TMUS
|
255.4B USD |
19%
|
6%
|
10%
|
7%
|
|
ZA |
M
|
MTN Group Ltd
JSE:MTN
|
232B Zac |
-7%
|
-2%
|
13%
|
32%
|
|
CN |
![]() |
China Mobile Ltd
SSE:600941
|
1.5T CNY |
10%
|
7%
|
10%
|
9%
|
|
IN |
![]() |
Bharti Airtel Ltd
NSE:BHARTIARTL
|
11T INR |
34%
|
7%
|
15%
|
12%
|
|
JP |
![]() |
SoftBank Group Corp
TSE:9984
|
12.9T JPY |
10%
|
2%
|
2%
|
2%
|
|
JP |
![]() |
SoftBank Corp
TSE:9434
|
10.3T JPY |
21%
|
3%
|
11%
|
6%
|
|
JP |
![]() |
KDDI Corp
TSE:9433
|
9.6T JPY |
13%
|
4%
|
13%
|
6%
|
|
MX |
![]() |
America Movil SAB de CV
BMV:AMXB
|
986.4B MXN |
9%
|
2%
|
15%
|
6%
|
|
UK |
![]() |
Vodafone Group PLC
LSE:VOD
|
19.8B GBP |
-7%
|
-3%
|
4%
|
9%
|
Free Cash Flow
Free cash flow (FCF) is the money a company has left over after paying its operating expenses and capital expenditures. The more free cash flow a company has, the more it can allocate to dividends, paying down debt, and growth opportunities.
If a company has a decreasing free cash flow, that is not necessarily bad if the company is investing in its growth.


