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Banking Videos 367 videos

Finance: What is Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO)?
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What is Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO)? A CMO is a mortgage bond that consists of a large number of different individual mortgages bundle...

Finance: What are Secured Bonds v Unsecured Bonds, and what is Non-Recourse Debt: Debentures (Subordinated and Senior)?
54 Views

When a bond is secured, it means it's protected, i.e. there are assets that would be forfeited if repayment is not made. When it's unsecured... it'...

Finance: What is Counterparty Risk?
9 Views

What is Counterparty Risk? Counterparty risk is the risk to either party within a transaction that the other will not or be unable to abide by the...

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Finance: What is the Debt-to-Equity Ratio? 11 Views


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Description:

What is the Debt-to-Equity Ratio? Debt to Equity ratio is a metric used to determine the degree of financial leverage a company has. The formula is the quotient of Total Liabilities divided by Total Shareholder Equity. Different industries, especially ones that may be capital intensive, such as aircraft manufacturing, may traditionally have higher Debt to Equity ratios than those with relatively low overhead, such as IT. If a company’s growth and profits continue to increase, investors are willing to accept higher debt to equity ratios, such as with Netflix or Amazon. The underlying rationale is that the increased debt funds are being used to gain more market share and increase business in a positive manner that can justify the higher ratios.

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Transcript

00:00

finance a la shmoop what is the debt to equity ratio? well simply put this ratio

00:08

answers the question who owns the company like if the debt to equity ratio

00:14

is high like there's tons of debt and very little equity well, then

00:18

essentially the bank or whoever the lenders are owned the company or at [Assets transfer to bank]

00:22

least the lion's share of the assets comprising it the opposite is true as

00:26

well of course and you can imagine a well-heeled company with tons of cash

00:30

and other assets like land and oil wells and Technology IP and no debt well they

00:35

could have a debt to equity ratio of zero so why do you even track this kind

00:40

of ratio well when companies are young they tend to not have tons of equity and

00:44

over time as they grow and get good at whatever it is they do they will [Clock rapidly ticks forward]

00:49

accumulate valuable assets like cash which are tracked as equity or

00:54

shareholders equity on the balance sheet that lives right here think about it if [Balance sheet appears]

01:00

this side is assets and this side is liabilities well if you're subtracting

01:05

liabilities from assets and you still have a lot of assets left over that's a

01:09

good thing and that line is tracked right here in the shareholders equity [Shareholders equity highlighted on balance sheet]

01:13

line ..........

01:16

you have a company with two billion dollars in debt at 5% interest costing a

01:20

hundred million bucks a year to rent if the company's shareholders equity is

01:23

just 50 million dollars well, the company is essentially owned

01:26

predominantly by its debt holders or lenders should something go wrong even a [A bank vault full of money]

01:32

little bit wrong well the company will go bankrupt the debt holders would own all

01:36

that equity and well spin this around and if the company's equity comprises 10

01:40

billion dollars of cash and a bunch of other assets for a total of 20 billion

01:44

of equity well then you can imagine the debt to equity ratio of just 10% that's

01:49

the equity holders of the company, they'll sleep like babies [Man taking a nap]

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