Return On Equity (ROE) A measure of a corporation's profitability that reveals how much profit a company generates with the money shareholders have invested.
Calculated as:
Also known as "return on net worth" (RONW). Investopedia Says: The ROE is useful for comparing the profitability of a company to that of other firms in the same industry.
There are several variations on the formula that investors may use:
1. Investors wishing to see the return on common equity may modify the formula above by subtracting preferred dividends from net income and subtracting preferred equity from shareholders' equity, giving the following: return on common equity (ROCE) = net income - preferred dividends / common equity.
2. Return on equity may also be calculated by dividing net income by average shareholders' equity. Average shareholders' equity is calculated by adding the shareholders' equity at the beginning of a period to the shareholders' equity at period's end and dividing the result by two.
3. Investors may also calculate the change in ROE for a period by first using the shareholders' equity figure from the beginning of a period as a denominator to determine the beginning ROE. Then, the end-of-period shareholders' equity can be used as the denominator to determine the ending ROE. Calculating both beginning and ending ROEs allows an investor to determine the change in profitability over the period. Related Terms: Du Pont Identity Net Income - NI Profitability Ratios Return On Assets - ROA Return On Capital Employed - ROCE Return On Gross Invested Capital - ROGIC Revenue Per Occupied Room - RevPOR Shareholders' Equity |