RATIO ANALYSIS (ALL VALUES IN Rs. MILLION) 1. GROSS PROFIT MARGIN (%): GROSS PROFIT = NET SALES – COGS = TOTAL REVENUE – (Employee Benefit Expense + Operating and Other Expenses + Finance Costs) = 53107 – (22510+21598+1025) = 7974 GROSS PROFIT MARGIN = (NET SALES – COGS)/NET SALES = (7974/ 53107)*100 = 15.01497% 2. RETURN ON ASSET(RoA) RETURN ON ASSET = (PAT/TOTAL ASSET)*100 = (4606/63454)*100 = 7.258% This indicates that around 7.3% of all assets have been utilized
Premium Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Financial ratios Balance sheet
Investment Banking in 2008 Group Report 1. Failure Analysis: Identify the major factors that contributed to Bear Stearns’s failure? Who stood to benefit from its implosion? How did Bear Stearns’s collapse differ from the ‘Long Term Capital Management’ failure a decade earlier? What could Bear Stearns have done differently to avoid this fate? In the early 2000’s? And during the summer of 2007? And during the week of March 10‚ 2008? (1) Identify
Premium Bank Subprime mortgage crisis Financial services
CHAPTER ONE 1.1 INTRODUCTION The financial services industry has undergone substantial changes from regulatory‚ technological‚ cultural and economical forces‚ among others. One of the most serious results of these changes is the need for financial service companies to be marketing-oriented. Marketing oriented companies places emphasis on their clients and customers’ needs and wants‚ and determines how these needs and wants can be beneficially served. A necessary component of marketing orientation
Premium Marketing Bank
Runninghead: IP 1 Individual Project Unit 3 BUS305-0804A-07 Concentration Ratio Economists use concentration ratio to measure the degree of concentration in a market‚ computed as the percentage of the market output produced by the largest firms (O’Sullivan‚ Sheffrin‚ & Perez. 2008). One of predominantly concentration ratio used is the Four Firm Concentration Ratio. Four Firm Concentration Ratio isthe percentage of total output in a market produced by the four largest firms. In considering
Premium Economics Monopoly Oligopoly
RURAL BANKING IN INDIA Introduction Rural banking in India has been the subject of study Survey Committee Report in 1954‚ literally thousand of reports have examined and investigated the problems relating to the credit delivery for agriculture and rural area. Latest magnum opus on the subject is the National Agricultural Credit Review report 2000. The Expert Committee on Rural Credit (Chairman: Professor V.S.Vyas) submitted its report in 2002.One
Premium Bank
Islamic Banking Analysis Haythem Joudeh February 22‚ 2013 Abstract This goal of this research is to find out if Islamic Banking is a better alternative to the Western‚ Conventional Banking. The information provided will reveal various Islamic Banking principles that would have prevented previous major economic crises and if applied globally today could prevent a major economic collapse. Islamic Banking is banking system based on Shari ’a (Islamic) Law on which it developed its unique
Premium Islamic banking Sharia
| JOLLIBEE FOODS CORPORATION | COMMON SIZE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND RATIO ANALYSIS | | RUFIN‚ MA. URIKA C.2008103114FIN102DEAN MAURICE SABIOSY2010-2011 | | | RATIO ANALYSIS | 1.) EARNINGS PER SHARE | | | | | | | | | EPS= | NET INCOME - PREFERRED DIVIDENDS | | | | AVE. NO. OF COMMON SHARES OUTSTANDING | | | | | | | | | NET INCOME | OUTSTANDING SHARES | | | 3‚637‚297‚943 | 2010 | 1‚053‚438‚818 | | | | 2009 | 1‚051‚458‚156 | | | |
Premium Balance sheet Dividend yield Financial ratios
1. Introduction 1 2. Executive Summary 1 3. Trends in Retail Banking 2 4. About the Internet 2 5. Virtual Banking and Applications 3 5.01. Interactive Application 4 5.02. Smart Cards 4 6. Online Banking System Security 5 6.01. Cryptography 6 6.02. Firewalls and Routers 7 6.03. Trusted Operating Systems 7 7. Supervision and Regulations of Network Banking 8 8. Conclusion 12 9. References 14 Introduction The
Premium Bank Banking
CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION PART A- BANKING INDUSTRY Indian Banking has come from a long way from being a sleepy business organization to a highly proactive and dynamic entity. This transformation has been brought by the liberalization and economic reforms that allowed Banks to explore new business opportunities. Banking in India has evolved through five distinct phases. Each phase could be separated from the other by a landmark development in the sphere of Banking Sector. Phase I –Pre-independence
Premium Bank
approval of Dr. Sun Yat-sen. From 1912 to 1949‚ the Bank served consecutively as the country’s central bank‚ international exchange bank and specialist foreign trade bank‚ and fulfilled its commitment to serving the public and developing China’s financial services sector. Prudent management and progressive reforms resulted in many significant achievements across the Bank’s diversified business operations. After the founding of the People’s Republic of China‚ Bank of China became the state-designated
Premium Bank Financial services