Ši byla yra iš bendros Wikimedia Commons nemokamų resursų duomenų bazės, palaikomos Wikimedia Foundation organizacijos. Norėdami sužinoti licencijavimo smulkmenas, žiūrėkite paveikslėlio aprašymą
Each of the five largest investment banks took on greater risk leading up to the subprime crisis. This is summarized by their leverage ratio, which is the ratio of total debt to total equity. A higher ratio indicates more risk. From fiscal years 2003-2007, these firms significantly increased their leverage ratios. A ratio of 10-15 is more typical of a conservative bank. These firms had ratios closer to 30.
A highly leveraged institution can have its equity wiped out due to relatively minor swings in the value of its assets. For example, let's suppose an investment bank has $310 in assets, $300 in debt and $10 in equity capital. This is a leverage ratio of 300/10 or 30-to-1. It is an accounting identity (a rule that must be true by definition) that assets equals the sum of liabilities and equity. Now suppose the value of the assets declines by about 3% to $300. The institution still owes its debt holders $300, so equity must be zero. Many financial institutions are facing this scenario. To get more equity or capital, they typically issue new common stock shares to the public in exchange for funds. However, this dilutes the ownership of current shareholders, placing downward pressure on the stock price. When share prices have been reduced as was the case in 2008, a larger and more dilutive issuance of shares is required. In some cases, new share issuance is done at below the current market value.
It is noteworthy that the leverage ratios at Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs were both under 15 as of Q1 2009, according to their Q1 financial reports available on their websites.
Source Data
thumb|Source data for the Graph
Source data is the 2007 Annual Reports (SEC Form 10K) for each firm. Search the PDF for "Selected Financial Data" so you get the 5-year comparison. Bear's is a bit tougher to find through their website, as it is now part of JP Morgan.
dalintis – kopijuoti, platinti bei persiųsti šį darbą
pri(si)taikyti – adaptuoti darbą
Su šiomis sąlygomis:
autoriaus nurodymas – Turite pateikti atitinkamą kreditą, pateikti nuorodą į licenciją ir nurodyti, ar buvo atlikti pakeitimai. Tai galite padaryti bet kokiu būdu, bet ne taip, kad licencijos išdavėjas patvirtintų jus ar jūsų naudojimą.
dalinkis panašiai – Jei perdirbsite, redaguosite ar atkursite šį darbą, jį galėsite platinti tik su tokia pačia ar panašia į šią licencija.
Suteikiamas leidimas kopijuoti, platinti ir/ar redaguoti šį dokumentą pagal GNU Free Documentation licencijos versijos 1.2 ar bet kurios vėlesnės versijos sąlygas, publikuotas Free Software Foundation; be nekintamų dalių, be priekinių ir galinių tekstinių žymų viršeliuose. Šios licencijos kopija įtraukta dalyje, pavadintoje GNU Free Documentation License.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue
Galite pasirinkti, kurią licenciją norite naudoti.
Originalus įkėlimo įrašas
Pirminis aprašymo puslapis buvo čia. Visi žemiau perteikti naudotojų vardai priklauso en.wikipedia.
{{Information |Description={{en|Leverage ratios of investment banks<br/> ==Explanation== Each of the five largest investment banks took on greater risk leading up to the subprime crisis. This is summarized by their leverage ratio, which is the ratio of t