Note: Revenues for privately held companies are statistical evaluations.
Cotton Belt's annual revenues are $10-$50 million (see exact revenue data) and has 10-100 employees. It is classified as operating in the Upholstered Household Furniture Manufacturing industry.
Note: Cotton Belt's revenues are gauged from an analysis of company filings.
Cotton Belt's Income Statement (based on Industry Averages)
$ Millions (Industry Average)
Cotton Belt Revenue (Sales)
Cost of Goods Sold
Gross Profit
Operating Expenses
Advertising
Salaries and wages
Other Operating Expenses
Total Operating Expenses
Operating Income
EBITDA
EBIT (Earnings Before Interest and Taxes)
Net Profit
Trademark Applications
Trademark applications show the products and services that Cotton Belt is developing and marketing.
Cotton Belt doesn't have any recent trademark applications, indicating Cotton Belt is focusing on
its existing business rather than expanding into new products and markets.
Trademarks may include brand names, product names, logos and slogans.
Trademark
Date
RIVER & BORD On-line retail store services featuring furniture
12/16/2020
RB On-line retail store services featuring furniture
12/16/2020
See all trademarks and details in the Full Report.
Recession Risk
Determine whether Cotton Belt grew or shrank during the last recession. This is useful in estimating the
financial strength and credit risk of the company.
Compare how recession-proof Cotton Belt is relative to the industry overall.
While a new recession may strike a particular industry, measuring the
industry and company's robustness during the last recession estimates its ability to weather future recessions.
These companies are similar in business line and location to Cotton Belt.
While some companies compete with neighboring businesses for customers, other companies may compete to attract skilled employees.
These companies are in the same general field as Cotton Belt and are rapidly expanding. Companies may grow organically or through acquisition. In some cases apparently high growth rates may be caused by data that weren't available in previous years.