What changes, if any, are evident in operating expenses, cost of goods sold, or gross margin versus the previous quarter? | UNTC (Aug 07, 2025) | Candlesense

What changes, if any, are evident in operating expenses, cost of goods sold, or gross margin versus the previous quarter?

Based on the excerpt you provided, the Business Wire release only announces that Unit Corporation (OTCQX: UNTC) has filed its unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements for the three‑ and six‑month periods ended June 30, 2025. The summary does not include any quantitative or qualitative details about:

  • Operating expenses (e.g., SG&A, R&D, other administrative costs)
  • Cost of goods sold (COGS) or cost of sales
  • Gross margin (or gross profit)

Because those line‑item figures and any quarter‑over‑quarter comparisons are absent from the provided text, we cannot determine from this news snippet whether operating expenses, COGS, or gross margin increased, decreased, or remained stable relative to the prior quarter.

What you can do next

  1. Review the filed statements – The full unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements for the three‑month and six‑month periods are available on the OTC Markets website (https://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/UNTC/disclosure) and on Unit Corporation’s investor‑relations page (https://unitcorp.com/investor‑relations/otc‑sec‑filings/). Those PDFs or HTML filings will contain the income‑statement line items you need.

  2. Locate the comparative figures – In the statements you’ll typically see a two‑column format: the current quarter (Q2 2025) versus the prior quarter (Q1 2025). Look for:

    • Operating expenses – often broken out by categories (selling, general & administrative, etc.)
    • Cost of goods sold – usually listed directly beneath revenue
    • Gross profit and gross margin – gross profit = revenue – COGS; gross margin is often expressed as a percentage of revenue
  3. Calculate the change

    • Absolute change = Current quarter amount – Prior quarter amount
    • Percent change = (Absolute change ÷ Prior quarter amount) × 100%
    • For gross margin, compare the percentage figures directly (e.g., 38% vs. 35%).

If you retrieve those filings and share the relevant numbers, I can help you interpret the changes and assess what they might mean for the company’s operational efficiency and profitability.