See: Return on Assets.
Well, when you go to a fancy sushi bar, those little orange eggs cost a small fortune. They come from libertarian salmon and taste just like salt licked from your grandmother’s purse. So that’s ROE. But it has nothing to do with that kind of ROE, or Return on Equity.
So very simply, any time you see a ratio that’s Return on anything, it means profits in the numerator sitting on something in the denominator. Like...return on sales is a company’s profit margin. Right? You have profits divided by sales, and that’s a pretty easy calculation to make if you have the data.
Return on Equity is a bit different, in that finding what you mean by equity is sometimes a bit of a moving target, or a religious discussion in the way the equity line on the balance sheet was, in fact, calculated. In essence, the equity of a company is what it owns. It’s the equity value of the firm. Like...the cash profits it has generated over time, or the cash it has received from investors, plus fair value of its patents and brands and distribution infrastructure, and 18 zillion other elements that add together to comprise whatever number is placed as the equity of the firm. So then the ROE for your lemonade stand, with 12 grand in profits, and equity of 36 grand, is ⅓, or 33%.
Is that good? Bad? Ugly? Well, in a vacuum, we don’t really know. Because each industry commands such different kinds of numbers when it comes to the efficient use of its equity. A lemonade stand needs relatively very little capital to get started. It should have very high returns from its equity, because its profit margins should be very high when it’s selling for a dollar-something that costs it a dime.
You can think of the 33% return as being something that might map to investing in a stock market reflective index fund. And yes, 33% a year return from any kind of stock market investment over time is a heroic score. The problem? The return number is likely highly volatile in a company with such massive return on equity. That is, yes, this year your little lemonade stand made 12 grand, but next year it might lose 5. The following year it might make 20, and the following year, go bankrupt. So the ROE number for a company so fragile, like Lemonade Stands R Us, is on the edge of meaningless.
Compare the ROE for a large oil company. Oil is massively less volatile as an industry than your lemonade stand. And 20 billion dollars just buys you a well, some storage tanks, a little distribution infrastructure, and hopefully a decent line to getting your money back. So if you measured the return on equity of a given oil company over a 10-year cycle, you might find that its return is only 4.5%. That equity could have been deployed almost certainly in the investing community...and done much better than what the managers of the oil company did in putting all that money in the ground through wells and exploration and refining, and so on. So, as an unschooled investor, you might begin to be leaning on management to take their cash and do something else with it.
Then, one day, a bomb goes off in the Middle East. A big one. Oil prices go from 50 bucks a barrel to 100, and for the following decade, the ROE of the oil company looks a lot more like the 33% from the lemonade company, and the investor who pushed Shell to fund a Google competitor goes back to work at Bank of America, trading four fives for a twenty, and pushing customers to refi their mortgage.
The bottom line is that ROE is a moving target at best, and only exists in the vague nether land of time, in that, contextually, it only means something when mapped against a whole host of other things players could do with their money. So if your company’s trying to stay above water, and you start smelling something fishy, it, uh, might just be the ROE.
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Finance: What are Return on Equity and R...145 Views
finance a la shmoop. what are return on equity and return on assets? all right
return on equity ROE .what is it? and no it's not that stuff that they stick on [sushi on a plate]
the outside of sushi. it's the kissing cousin of ROA if that helps. so what
is return then in this instance huh? well it's just profits. and there's a broader
frame here to think about. if your company just made five million dollars
in profits, was that good bad middlin? well if you were a little lemonade stand
that took 50 grand to start last year and you've made this massive five
million dollar haul well then yeah wow that's awesome. but if you're Google and
this year you only made five million bucks well you have tens of billions of
dollars of capital out there trying to earn lots more while making only five
million was a huge fail. so these concepts revolve around the balance
sheet remember this thing well here are assets, and if your General Electric the [balance sheet shown]
asset side is enormous. say with the notional fifty billion dollars in assets
if you made a ten percent return on your assets or raw ROA
return on assets well that would mean you netted five billion dollars right?
ten percent of 50 billions five billion. your return on assets was ten percent [math equation shown]
there. so remember equity or shareholders equity or retained equity on the balance
sheet yeah this thing right here what equity is the retained profits after
you've started to build your company and after years and years of building your
company you would expect to have a lot of retained earnings. so what were the
returns on that equity or ROE only returns or profits number is the same as
it was in the ROA calculation only now in the denominator we have equity so if
your returns were say five billion and your retained equity was twenty billion [equations shown]
well you had a lovely twenty five percent return this year. twenty five
percent of twenty billion you know five billion. meaning that in just this one
year you grew your retained equity one massively. you've become a big harvester [man lifts weights]
of cash profits from whatever great business it is that you built. well why
do we care about ROA and ROE? well because capital efficiency
matters. it's a reflection of how efficient you are, how well you're
investing your capital how will you're able to grow the business. that is in
theory you could just sell your assets and go invest them elsewhere, like go
play an index fund in the stock market, and potentially return better profits
for your shareholders, and if you can do that well then you're probably going to
get fired. and there is precedent for this change .the airline industry there [airplane taking off]
was a time when American Airlines and United Airlines and crash Airlines owned
all their airplanes. they bought them at 50 million bucks a pop give or take but
the airline industry is a lousy business producing very low cash profits. every
time the economic cycle is good the economy is good people are buying
airline tickets up the wazoo, the Union strike and the airline's try to do
stupid things with pricing and a bunch of other things happen and all the
profits go away. anyway so one day a smart MBA employed by the airline said
hey dudes why don't we just lease the airplanes from Boeing or whoever makes [man speaks to group]
them and we only need a fraction of our assets or equity or capital to produce
about the same investment returns for our shareholders. yeah and that's what
they did. so most airlines these days don't own
their own planes they lease them from the manufacturer or others and well
there haven't been any airline bankruptcies lately. and yes the airline
industry hard to find a better success story. [plane takes off]
Up Next
What is ROE? ROE is an acronym for Return on Equity. For shareholders, it is a metric equivalent for return on assets. The formula for ROE is Net I...