Thread regarding Corinthian Colleges Inc. layoffs

2010 to 2011- Revenues increased yet student count decreased. Why cannot management make more money with higher revenues and fewer students?

Take a look at these (old) LA times graphics which shows that CCi was increasing prices around 2010. Student count: http://www.trbimg.com/img-53c5cc02/turbine/la-fi-g-corinthian-colleges-enroll-20140715/650/16x9 Revenues and income: http://www.trbimg.com/img-53c5cc92/turbine/la-fi-g-corinthian-colleges-revenue-20140715/650/16x9 Following basic economics, the student count was going down after the increase, yet the total revenues were going up. While that might seem favorable, and a higher level of profit should be obtained, the opposite was true: CCi was increasing losses. 2011 was the peak year for revenues, with a lower student count, but the losses were maximized at over $100M for the year. More revenues, fewer students to serve, and a huge loss. Subprime management? http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-corinthian-colleges-20140716-story.html#page=1

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| 441 views | | 4 replies (last August 30, 2014) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+xlMgxub

4 replies (most recent on top)

Why are you asking us?

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Post ID: @BXN+xlMgxub

When the economy goes bad, student numbers go up. When the economy is healthy, there are fewer student numbers at 'career colleges.' Same old news.

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Post ID: @Wd5+xlMgxub

More crack research that is old news . . .

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Post ID: @OgY+xlMgxub

The LA Times is not an employee.

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Post ID: @iDK+xlMgxub

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