Return on Equity (ROE)
Return on Equity (ROE)
A profitability ratio measuring how efficiently a company generates profits from shareholder equity, calculated as Net Income ÷ Shareholder Equity. Higher ROE indicates better management performance in using equity capital to generate earnings. Commonly used in fundamental analysis to compare companies within the same industry.
A company with $5 million in net income and $25 million in shareholder equity has an ROE of 20% ($5M ÷ $25M), meaning it generates $0.20 of profit for every dollar of equity capital.
ROE vs ROA: ROE measures returns on shareholder equity only, while ROA measures returns on total assets. High leverage (debt) can inflate ROE while masking overall company efficiency.
How This Is Tested
- Calculating ROE given net income and shareholder equity values
- Comparing companies using ROE to identify superior management efficiency
- Understanding how leverage affects ROE (higher debt can increase ROE without improving operations)
- Distinguishing between ROE (equity focus) and ROA (total asset focus)
- Identifying situations where high ROE might be misleading due to excessive leverage
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ROE calculation formula | Net Income ÷ Shareholder Equity | Expressed as a percentage; higher values indicate better equity efficiency |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
An investment adviser is analyzing three companies in the technology sector for a client focused on management efficiency. Company A has an ROE of 25% with a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.3. Company B has an ROE of 30% with a debt-to-equity ratio of 2.5. Company C has an ROE of 18% with a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.1. Which company demonstrates the most sustainable profitability from equity without excessive leverage risk?
A is correct. Company A demonstrates the best balance of strong ROE (25%) with conservative leverage (debt-to-equity of 0.3), indicating genuine operational efficiency without excessive financial risk. This combination suggests sustainable profitability from equity capital.
B is incorrect because while Company B has the highest ROE (30%), its very high debt-to-equity ratio of 2.5 means this ROE is artificially inflated by leverage. The company has $2.50 of debt for every $1 of equity, which magnifies returns but also significantly increases financial risk. This ROE may not be sustainable if the company faces operational challenges. C is incorrect because although Company C has the most conservative capital structure (0.1 debt-to-equity), its ROE of 18% is the lowest of the three, indicating less efficient use of equity capital. D is incorrect because higher leverage does NOT always benefit shareholders—it magnifies both gains and losses, and excessive debt increases bankruptcy risk and financial distress costs.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to evaluate ROE in context with other financial metrics, particularly leverage ratios. Understanding that high ROE can be achieved through operational excellence (good) or excessive debt (risky) is critical for making sound investment recommendations and assessing the quality of earnings.
Return on Equity (ROE) measures which of the following?
B is correct. ROE specifically measures how efficiently a company generates profits from shareholder equity, calculated as Net Income ÷ Shareholder Equity. It shows how many dollars of profit the company produces for each dollar of equity capital.
A describes Return on Assets (ROA), not ROE. ROA uses total assets in the denominator rather than shareholder equity. C describes the Price-to-Book ratio, which compares market value to book value of equity. D describes the dividend payout ratio, which measures what percentage of earnings are distributed as dividends rather than measuring profitability efficiency.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests your knowledge of fundamental analysis ratios and their specific meanings. Distinguishing ROE from ROA and other profitability metrics is essential for accurate financial statement analysis and investment evaluation.
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Access Free BetaA corporation reports net income of $8 million for the year. Its balance sheet shows total shareholder equity of $40 million. What is the company's Return on Equity (ROE)?
B is correct. Calculate: ROE = Net Income ÷ Shareholder Equity = $8 million ÷ $40 million = 0.20 = 20%. This means the company generates $0.20 of profit for every $1 of shareholder equity.
A (12.5%) incorrectly reverses the calculation ($8M ÷ $64M or uses wrong denominator). C (25%) incorrectly uses $32 million as the denominator instead of $40 million. D (32%) incorrectly calculates using inverted values or wrong numerator/denominator combination.
ROE calculation questions appear regularly on the Series 65 exam as part of fundamental analysis testing. Understanding the straightforward formula (Net Income ÷ Shareholder Equity) and being able to calculate it accurately is essential for evaluating company profitability and management efficiency.
All of the following statements about Return on Equity (ROE) are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). ROE is calculated by dividing net income by shareholder equity, NOT total assets. Dividing net income by total assets produces Return on Assets (ROA), a different profitability metric.
A is accurate: ROE specifically measures management's efficiency in using shareholder equity capital to generate earnings, making it a key indicator of capital efficiency. B is accurate: Higher ROE values typically indicate that management is more effective at converting equity investments into profits, though this must be evaluated alongside leverage levels. D is accurate: Companies can increase ROE by taking on more debt (increasing leverage), which reduces equity while potentially maintaining or increasing net income. This means a rising ROE doesn't always signal better operations—it might just reflect higher financial risk through increased borrowing.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish between similar financial metrics. Understanding that ROE uses shareholder equity (not total assets) in the denominator is critical for avoiding confusion with ROA and for accurately interpreting company financial performance.
A company has net income of $12 million, shareholder equity of $60 million, total assets of $100 million, and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.67. Which of the following statements are accurate?
1. The company's ROE is 20%
2. The company's ROA is 12%
3. The company has $40 million in debt
4. Higher leverage would decrease the company's ROE
B is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 3 are accurate. Statement 4 is FALSE.
Statement 1 is TRUE: ROE = Net Income ÷ Shareholder Equity = $12M ÷ $60M = 0.20 = 20%.
Statement 2 is TRUE: ROA = Net Income ÷ Total Assets = $12M ÷ $100M = 0.12 = 12%. Note that ROA is lower than ROE, which is typical when companies use leverage.
Statement 3 is TRUE: Debt-to-Equity ratio = Debt ÷ Equity, so 0.67 = Debt ÷ $60M. Therefore, Debt = 0.67 × $60M = $40M. This can be verified: Total Assets ($100M) = Shareholder Equity ($60M) + Debt ($40M).
Statement 4 is FALSE: Higher leverage would typically INCREASE ROE, not decrease it. When a company takes on more debt, it reduces shareholder equity (the denominator) while potentially maintaining or increasing net income through the use of borrowed capital. This leverage effect magnifies ROE. For example, if the company borrowed more to reduce equity to $50M while maintaining $12M net income, ROE would rise to 24% ($12M ÷ $50M).
The Series 65 exam tests your comprehensive understanding of how ROE, ROA, and leverage interact. Understanding that leverage increases ROE (by reducing the equity denominator) is critical for evaluating whether high ROE reflects operational excellence or simply financial engineering through debt.
💡 Memory Aid
Think "ROE = Return On Equity = Reward for Owners' Equity": How much profit does the company generate for every dollar that shareholders have invested? Formula: Net Income ÷ Shareholder Equity. Higher is better, but watch out for companies juicing ROE with excessive debt!
Related Concepts
This term is part of this cluster: