Standard Register Company (SR)

3.18 +0.00  +0.00%  May 17, 8:00PM
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Standard Register Company R&D Expense Quarterly

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Standard Register Company R&D Expense Quarterly Chart

    Standard Register Company Historical R&D Expense Quarterly Data

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    Dec. 31, 2004 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2004 Go Pro
    June 30, 2004 Go Pro
    March 31, 2004 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2003 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2003 Go Pro
    June 30, 2003 Go Pro
    March 31, 2003 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2002 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2002 Go Pro
    June 30, 2002 Go Pro
    March 31, 2002 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2001 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2001 Go Pro
    June 30, 2001 Go Pro
    March 31, 2001 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2000 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2000 Go Pro
    June 30, 2000 Go Pro
    March 31, 2000 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 1999 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 1999 Go Pro
       
    June 30, 1999 Go Pro
    March 31, 1999 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 1998 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 1998 Go Pro
    June 30, 1998 Go Pro
    March 31, 1998 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 1997 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 1997 Go Pro
    June 30, 1997 Go Pro
    March 31, 1997 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 1996 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 1996 Go Pro
    June 30, 1996 Go Pro
    March 31, 1996 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 1995 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 1995 Go Pro
    June 30, 1995 Go Pro
    March 31, 1995 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 1994 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 1994 Go Pro
    June 30, 1994 Go Pro
    March 31, 1994 Go Pro

    About R&D Expense

    R&D expenses are a line item from many companies' income statements.

    R&D expense (short for research and development expense) is essentially the amount of money that a company spends to develop new products and services each year. For example, if a pharmaceutical firm hires research scientists to develop new drugs, the salaries of these researchers will generally be expensed in the R&D expense category.

    Like marketing expenses, but unlike capital expenditures, R&D expenses are subtracted from revenues every year directly. Therefore, accountants treat R&D spending as an expense rather than as an investment, though there is continuous debate over whether this is the correct classification.

    An investor looking at companies with large R&D expenditures should think hard about whether a single company's R&D spending is an expense (like buying rubber to produce tires) or whether it is an investment (like buying machinery to produce tires more efficiently). Determining the answer to that question can have a large impact on how the company is valued.
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