Thursday, March 18, 2021

Return on Equity SBL

 

Return on Equity

ROE is expressed as a percentage and can be calculated for any company if net income and equity are both positive numbers. Net income is calculated before dividends paid to common shareholders and after dividends to preferred shareholders and interest to lenders.

Formula: 

Return on Equity

Sonali Bank Limited

FY2019

FY2018

FY2017

FY2016

FY2015

3.92%

3.32%

10.63%

2.18%

0.99%

 





Fig: ROE of Sonali Bank for 2015-19

 

 

In the graph, the researcher finds; up-down return on equity. Hare in 2015 and 16 the return on equity was consistently 0.99% and 2.18% then the next year in 2017 it moved to the top at 10.63%. Then in 2018 and 19 the return on equity consistently was 3.32% and   3.93%. In general eyes, it is an up-down graph. But the researcher focused deeply and fined it, the return on equity of Sonali Bank gradually moved upward from 2015 to 2019 except in 2017 ( 0.99% → 2.18% →3.32% → 2.92%). And in 2017 there was an economic benefit. 

  

Earnings per Share

The earnings per share value are calculated as the net income divided by the available shares.

Formula:

Earnings Per Share

Sonali Bank Limited

FY2019

FY2018

FY2017

FY2016

FY2015

5.98

5.47

18.50

3.96

1.53

 

 

Fig: EPS of Sonali Bank for 2015-19

Earnings per Share represents the earning capacity of a company. It unfolds, how much profit earn by using per share. On the above graph, in 2019 the EPS is 5.98 that means Sonali Bank limited earns 5.98 Taka agents a share price. Here the research compares the last five years’ EPS horizontally to show the actual ability, growth, and long-term earning capability of Sonali Bank Limited.

In In this above graph, the researcher shows in 2015 the EPS was 1.53 then in 2016 the EPS was 3.96, and the same way the EPS of Sonali Bank Limited is growing until in 2019 at 5.98 except 2017. In 2017 the EPS was very high because at that time SBL had gotten an economic benefit. 

EPS ratio analysis for SBL

Thursday, November 26, 2020

Fiscal policy

 



Fiscal policy


Fiscal policy has four elements: tax policy, the profits of state-owned enterprises, other revenues, and government expenditure policies. The state influences the level of the national output primarily by controlling tax revenue and expenditures, but the methods for doing each are different.

In China, a proactive financial approach has been executed for a long time, and the impacts are amazing. Important divisions have plainly asserted that proactive financial arrangement will steadily grow dim in the following not many years. The creator thinks there is still long haul space for improvement in China and other agricultural nations. The difficult right currently is that public sparing is for the most part concentrated in banks, which are the principal channel to move reserve funds into venture. Notwithstanding, as of late in view of a high pace of non-performing credits, to make preparations for monetary dangers, they can't significantly extend advances. In this way, the movement of venture and financing framework change should be quickened, the strategies and devices for moving reserve funds to speculation should be extended, and the extent of direct financing should likewise be extended to tackle China's concern of a moderate expansion in social venture

Monetary Policy




 Monetary Policy 

is one of the two chief methods (the other being financial arrangement) by which government experts in a market economy routinely impact the movement and heading off by and large monetary action, significantly including not just the degree of total yield and work yet in addition the overall rate at which costs rise or fall. The capacity of national banks to do financial arrangements comes from their syndication position as providers of their own liabilities, which banks thusly need (either as lawfully required stores or as equilibriums for settling interbank claims) to make the cash and credit utilized by people in general in regular monetary exchanges. Significant advancements both in exploration and in the real lead of financial arrangement in late many years have spun around the decision of a transient loan fee versus a save amount as the national bank's immediate working instrument, regardless of whether to utilize some proportion of cash as a transitional objective, whether to oblige the national bank to adhere to some genuinely straightforward arrangement rule, what level of political autonomy a national bank ought to have, and whether to target expansion. Some vital regions of progressing research here, as of the start of the twenty-first century, are whether the social cycle by which financial strategy influences nonfinancial monetary movement fixates more on cash or on layaway, quantitative estimation of whatever is the system at work, the compromise between value expansion, and genuine parts of financial action like yield and business, and exactly why it is that general society in most industrialized nations is as disinclined to swelling as is evidently the situation.

Friday, October 30, 2020

What Is Personal Finance?

 

What Is Personal Finance?





Personal finance is the process of planning and managing personal financial activities such as income generation, spending, saving, investing, and protection. The process of managing one’s personal finances can be summarized in a budget or financial plan. This guide will analyze the most common and important aspects of individual financial management.

 In Other words 

Personal finance is managing your money as well as saving and investing. It encompasses budgeting, banking, insurance, mortgages, investments, retirement planning, and tax and estate planning. The term often refers to the entire industry that provides financial services to individuals and households and advises them about financial and investment opportunities.



Areas of Personal Finance

Here we are focused on breaking down the most important areas of personal finance and explore each of them in more detail so you have a comprehensive understanding of the topic.

the main areas of personal finance are 

  • Income

  • Spending

  • saving 

  • Investing and 

  • protection. 

Each of these areas will be examined in more detail below.

1 Income 

Income refers to a source of cash inflow that an individual receives and then uses to support themselves and their family. It is the starting point for our financial planning process.

Common sources of income are:

  • Salaries

  • Bonuses

  • Hourly wages

  • Pensions

  • Dividends 

These sources of income all generate cash that an individual can use to either spend, save, or invest. In this sense, income can be thought of as the first step in our personal finance roadmap.

#2 Spending

Spending includes all types of expenses an individual incurs related to buying goods and services or anything that is consumable (i.e., not an investment). All spending falls into two categories: cash (paid for with cash on hand) and credit (paid for by borrowing the money). The majority of most people’s income is allocated to spending.

Common sources of spending are:

  • Rent

  • Mortgage payments

  • Taxes

  • Food

  • Entertainment

  • Travel

  • Credit card payments

  • Home rent

  • Tuition fees

 

The expenses listed above all reduce the amount of cash an individual has available for saving and investing. If expenses are greater than income, the individual has a deficit. Managing expenses is just as important as generating income, and typically people have more control over their discretionary expenses than their income. Good spending habits are critical for good personal finance management.

#3 Saving

Saving refers to excess cash that is retained for future investing or spending. If there is a surplus between what a person earns as income and what they spend, the difference can be directed towards savings or investments. Managing savings is a critical area of personal finance.

Common forms of savings include:

  • Physical cash

  • Savings bank account

  • Checking bank account

  • Money market securities

 

Most people keep at least some savings to manage their cash flow and the short-term difference between their income and expenses. Having too many savings, however, can actually be viewed as a bad thing since it earns little to no return compared to investments.

 

#4 Investing

Investing relates to the purchase of assets that are expected to generate a rate of return, with the hope that over time the individual will receive back more money than they originally invested. Investing carries risk, and not all assets actually end up producing a positive rate of return. This is where we see the relationship between risk and return.

Common forms of investing include:

  • Stocks

  • Bonds

  • Mutual funds

  • Real estate

  • Private companies

  • Commodities

  • Art

Investing is the most complicated area of personal finance and is one of the areas where people get the most professional advice. There are vast differences in risk and reward between different investments, and most people seek help with this area of their financial plan.

 

#5 Protection

Personal protection refers to a wide range of products that can be used to guard against an unforeseen and adverse event.

Common protection products include:

  • Life insurance

  • Health insurance

  •  Estate planning

This is another area of personal finance where people typically seek professional advice and which can become quite complicated. There is a whole series of analysis that needs to be done to properly assess an individual’s insurance and estate planning needs.


Return on Equity SBL

  Return on Equity ROE is expressed as a percentage and can be calculated for any company if net income and equity are both positive numbe...