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Principles of Finance: Unit 4, ROE Is Not a Type of Sushi 4 Views
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Description:
ROE v ROA: The Smackdown. ROE is Return on Equity; ROA is Return on Assets. There's also ROB - Return of Late Library Books.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop ROE. it's not a type of sushi. when
- 00:08
financial managers think about the word returns ,they're not thinking about you [ man in suit smiles]
- 00:12
know that blouse washed me out so I'm taking it back to Macy's for a different
- 00:16
color. rather they're thinking about financial returns of the flavor oh we
- 00:21
put a dollar in today and we expect a lot more than a dollar back in a few
Full Transcript
- 00:25
years. that's financial return and there are really two primary measures managers
- 00:30
rely on return on assets ROA or return on equity, ROE. all right well the
- 00:36
broader concept just asks am i investing well? well ROA measures the financial
- 00:42
return investors received over the course of a year, generally. and is
- 00:46
calculated as return divided by total assets. so what kind of return goes in
- 00:51
the numerator here? well it could be net income you know the only problem here is
- 00:56
that net income sometimes has one-time charges ie a lawsuit that was settled
- 01:01
and you know we lost, or it could have big losses this year which won't happen
- 01:05
again next year, so we backed them out. well maybe we call this recurring
- 01:10
returns so we can subtract out the one-timers. yeah that works all right [equation for recurring returns]
- 01:13
well what about taxes and interest costs in a volatile interest rate world? what
- 01:18
do we do about those and what about one-time gains on a sale of a subsidiary
- 01:21
which carried a lot of debt and tax losses with it? translation? yeah it's all
- 01:25
very complicated. well most managers get past all that
- 01:28
noise by ignoring net income and instead reporting operating earnings. so check
- 01:34
this out our revenues cups liquid rent labor and five six to five yeah there we
- 01:39
go. in this little model it's the $7,500
- 01:42
figure, and we scan our balance sheet for you here at no extra charge from
- 01:47
Schmucks current and cents and pounds of sugar. all right so we have one hundred
- 01:51
eighteen thousand bucks in total assets. very interesting and that these are the
- 01:56
numbers three days before the Super Bowl transaction and they're not pretty, right?
- 02:00
from one hundred eighteen thousand dollars in total assets we've only been [balance sheet pictured]
- 02:04
able to take out seventy five hundred bucks in operating profits. you could
- 02:09
have invested that money in a lot of places and done way better than the six
- 02:12
percent returns that it implies, but if you wait
- 02:15
a few days and the transaction happens, depending on the deal structure well all
- 02:20
the sudden you have something more like fifty thousand dollars in operating
- 02:23
profits with about the same total assets so all of a sudden your ratios look a
- 02:28
whole lot better. moral of the story, sales matter. having tons of accounts
- 02:33
receivable are nice but they aren't sales. sales convert inventory to cash,
- 02:38
and that generally speaking is a good thing. so if you had operating profits of
- 02:42
fifty thousand dollars in total assets of a hundred thousand then your ROA
- 02:46
would be 50%. think about it in the form that if you had invested $100,000 this [equation]
- 02:53
year to just buy those assets and you already got half your money back, well
- 02:57
you'd be doing exceedingly well. big number. you're swinging. ROE is a
- 03:02
different measure of how well managers are doing in returning earnings to
- 03:07
shareholders. ROE uses fully taxed earnings or net income after everything
- 03:13
dead included and it puts it in the numerator.
- 03:16
why use fully taxed and include interest costs well because in this case ROA is
- 03:21
quote wedded unquote to the common equity of the firm or rather the equity
- 03:26
value of the firm. a big part of the equity value as far as earnings goes [ROE and equity value get married]
- 03:30
includes basically everything. well as the common owner you are the backstop
- 03:35
the last word the final say so you have to pay for everything. so everything
- 03:39
should be included in this calculation. hopefully not surprising then the common
- 03:43
equity or shareholders common stock equity is the denominator. and our little
- 03:49
balance sheet above that would be the ninety eight thousand dollar figure
- 03:52
right there - if our net income was nine thousand eight hundred in a given year
- 03:56
then applying Fancy Pants math we'd have ROES ten percent right ?and oh by the
- 04:01
way in any of these calculations where you take a year's income in whatever
- 04:05
form operating net income da da da you know you put it over the
- 04:09
beginning of the year balance sheet item. why? because at the beginning of the year [equation]
- 04:13
you have your finite universe of assets with which to manage. based on those
- 04:18
resources you then generate returns for the subsequent following year. so the
- 04:24
denominator is kind of easy. shareholders common
- 04:27
stock equity at the beginning of the year, that's it so next time you hear about
- 04:30
ROE, don't think about that sushi think about the Benjamins you pay to eat
- 04:34
it. [man grimaces at restaurant bill]
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