The following chart shows the debt to
shareholders equity ratios for each of the stocks highlighted as a liquidation candidate above, rebased so that the last year's number equals 100.
Not exact matches
Return on
equity is the
ratio of annualized net income less preferred dividends to average
shareholders»
equity for the periods presented.
Debt - to - capital
ratio excluding net unrealized investment gains, net of tax, included in
shareholders»
equity
Core return on
equity is the
ratio of annualized core income less preferred dividends to adjusted average
shareholders»
equity for the periods presented.
The
ratio of debt - to - capital excluding after - tax net unrealized investment gains included in
shareholders»
equity was 23.4 %, within the Company's target range of 15 % to 25 %.
Debt - to - capital
ratio excluding net unrealized gain on investments, net of tax, included in
shareholders»
equity, is the
ratio of debt to total capitalization excluding the after - tax impact of net unrealized investment gains and losses included in
shareholders»
equity.
Average annual core return on
equity over a period is the
ratio of: a) the sum of core income less preferred dividends for the periods presented to b) the sum of: 1) the sum of the adjusted average
shareholders»
equity for all full years in the period presented, and 2) for partial years in the period presented, the number of quarters in that partial year divided by four, multiplied by the adjusted average
shareholders»
equity of the partial year.
He likes to see the
ratio of debt to total capitalization (debt divided by
shareholders»
equity plus debt) under 50 %.
We can interpret a debt -
equity ratio of 0.5 as saying that the company is using $ 0.50 of liabilities in addition to each $ 1 of
shareholders»
equity in the business.
On the other hand, a high debt - to -
equity ratio translates into higher risk for
shareholders since creditors are always first in line for compensation should the company go bankrupt.
A debt - to -
equity ratio is a number that describes a company's debt divided by its
shareholders»
equity.
First Asset Global Value Class ETF (TSX: FGU) The First Asset Global Value Class ETF's investment objective is to seek to provide
shareholders with long term capital appreciation, through investing the ETF's portfolio to gain exposure to
equity securities of companies primarily from developed markets that exhibit strong «value» characteristics like low price - to - book
ratios and low price - to - cash flow
ratios.
Some of these factors include above average earnings per - share growth rates, above average return on
equity, excess free cash flow, low debt - to -
equity ratios, and
shareholder friendly management.
A company's ROE
ratio is calculated by dividing the company's net income by its
shareholder equity, or book value.
A financial
ratio indicating the relative proportion of
shareholder equity and debt used to finance a company's assets.
Some of these factors include above - average earnings per - share growth rates, above - average return on
equity, excess - free cash flow, low debt - to -
equity ratios, and
shareholder - friendly management.
The debt - to -
equity ratio measures the relationship between the amount of capital that has been borrowed (i.e. debt) and the amount of capital contributed by
shareholders (i.e.
equity).
We can interpret a debt -
equity ratio of 0.5 as saying that the company is using $ 0.50 of liabilities in addition to each $ 1 of
shareholders»
equity in the business.
On the other hand, a high debt - to -
equity ratio translates into higher risk for
shareholders since creditors are always first in line for compensation should the company go bankrupt.
The
equity q
ratio (or «Q
ratio», as Spitznagel describes it in his papers) is market capitalization over
shareholders»
equity.
Debt to
equity ratio The debt to
equity ratio of a company is simply its level of debt (any type of borrowed money) divided by
equity (the
shareholders» money in the business).
More specifically, Graham wanted his stocks to have leverage
ratios (the
ratio of total assets to
shareholders»
equity) of two or less.
Convertibles & other types of preference capital are somewhat similar (and some companies include them in leverage
ratios)-- arguably they're
equity / non-callable liabilities, but they also increase risk / leverage for ordinary
shareholders, so the same haircut's acceptable here too.
To me it seems like you are taking the ROE — typically the
ratio of net income to
shareholder equity — and modifying it to take into account the current stock price (your invested
equity).
Leverage
ratios cover debt to
equity ratio, debt
ratio, fixed asset to
shareholders fund
ratio and interest coverage
ratio.
This
ratio comes in several variations, but the basic idea is that you measure a company's financial leverage by comparing its debt with its
shareholders»
equity.
Return on
Equity (ROE) is the ratio to depict the profit earned with respect to shareholder equity in a co
Equity (ROE) is the
ratio to depict the profit earned with respect to
shareholder equity in a co
equity in a company.