ROE

What is ROE

Return on Equity (ROE) measures a company's profitability by dividing its Net Income by its Average Shareholders' Equity, providing insight into how efficiently a company uses shareholder capital to generate earnings. To use this metric effectively, consider calculating ROE using average equity for period comparisons, as this approach can help reduce potential distortions and provide a more accurate picture of a company's profitability over time.

The Return on Equity (ROE) metric measures a company's profitability by calculating the net income generated in relation to the average shareholders' equity. Conceptually, it is constructed by dividing net income by average shareholders' equity, providing insight into a company's ability to generate profits from shareholders' investments. Generally, higher ROE readings signal that a company is more efficient in utilizing its equity to generate income, while lower readings may indicate less efficient use of equity or lower profitability.

How to calculate it

Formula

ROE = Net Income / Average Shareholders' Equity

Example

Example frame: ROE rises when the numerator increases relative to the denominator, and falls when the denominator improves relative to the numerator. Open the live stock page.

Calculation Methods

ROE can be calculated using either ending equity or average equity, with analysts often preferring average equity for period comparisons, as it provides a more accurate signal by smoothing out fluctuations in equity over time.

Benchmarks

The Return on Equity (ROE) metric can vary significantly by sector or business model due to differences in capital structure and operating requirements, making it essential to consider sector medians when evaluating a company's performance. To contextualize a company's ROE, investors can compare it to the live S&P 500 benchmark and sector medians, which provide a basis for understanding the company's relative profitability.

Sector comparison

As of Jul 9, 2026 | n=12Median ROE by sector
SectorMedian ROEAs of
S&P 50014.49%Jul 9, 2026
Industrials20.44%Jul 9, 2026
Technology18.89%Jul 9, 2026
Consumer Defensive17.6%Jul 9, 2026
Consumer Cyclical16.73%Jul 9, 2026
Communication Services16.19%Jul 9, 2026
Energy14.7%Jul 9, 2026
Financial Services14.56%Jul 9, 2026
Healthcare13.05%Jul 9, 2026
Basic Materials12.04%Jul 9, 2026
Utilities10.2%Jul 9, 2026
Real Estate6.95%Jul 9, 2026

Universe distribution

As of Dec 31, 2023 | n=3,434Universe distribution versus S&P 500Typical range is the 25th to 75th percentile: -19.73% to 15.09%. Values outside that band need a business-specific explanation.

Chart view is trimmed to the 5th-95th percentile for readability.

Interpretation

How to read it

  1. Check whether ROE is driven by net income growth or by a shrinking equity base, since a rising ROE can mask deteriorating profitability if shareholders' equity is being depleted through buybacks or losses.
  2. Compare ROE across years using average shareholders' equity rather than ending equity to smooth out timing distortions from large capital raises or share repurchases that artificially inflate or deflate the metric in a single period.
  3. Examine whether high ROE persists across multiple years or spikes in isolated periods, because a one-time gain or accounting adjustment can inflate net income and create a misleading reading that does not reflect sustainable earning power.
  4. Assess ROE alongside the company's debt-to-equity ratio, since financial leverage amplifies returns to shareholders but increases financial risk and can make ROE appear strong even when underlying operational performance is weak.

High vs low

A high ROE signals that management converts shareholder capital into profit efficiently. However, the leverage trap distorts this signal: a company with modest operating performance can inflate ROE by borrowing heavily, since equity shrinks while net income may remain stable or grow. A low ROE can reflect genuine operational weakness, but it may also indicate a capital-intensive business model, a company in heavy reinvestment phase, or one with conservative leverage. To distinguish signal from distortion, compare ROE across peers in the same industry, examine the trend over multiple periods, and cross-check against Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) to see whether returns exceed the cost of all capital, not just equity.

Reference

Extremes

As of Jul 9, 2026 | sp500Current highest and lowest ROEThese are the top and bottom 3 companies in the S&P 500 for this metric.
Highest
  • Colgate-Palmolive Company (CL)
    Consumer Defensive
    14.39%
    ROE
  • Gartner, Inc. (IT)
    Industrials
    11.68%
    ROE
  • GoDaddy Inc. (GDDY)
    Technology
    366.7%
    ROE
Lowest
  • Mettler-Toledo International Inc. (MTD)
    Healthcare
    -20.89%
    ROE
  • HP Inc. (HPQ)
    Technology
    -17.73%
    ROE
  • The Clorox Company (CLX)
    Consumer Defensive
    -11.28%
    ROE
GroupCompanyTickerSectorROEAs of
HighestColgate-Palmolive CompanyCLConsumer Defensive14.39%Jul 9, 2026
HighestGartner, Inc.ITIndustrials11.68%Jul 9, 2026
HighestGoDaddy Inc.GDDYTechnology366.7%Jul 9, 2026
LowestMettler-Toledo International Inc.MTDHealthcare-20.89%Jul 9, 2026
LowestHP Inc.HPQTechnology-17.73%Jul 9, 2026
LowestThe Clorox CompanyCLXConsumer Defensive-11.28%Jul 9, 2026

Limitations

When interpreting Return on Equity (ROE) values, several limitations can affect the quality of the signal they provide about a company's profitability.

  • ROE reflects only accounting profit, not cash generation, so a company with high net income but weak cash conversion may show an inflated return on equity.
  • ROE is sensitive to balance sheet timing and composition, meaning a company that reduces equity through share buybacks or dividend payouts can mechanically raise ROE without improving underlying business performance.
  • ROE does not account for the cost or risk of the capital structure, so two companies with identical ROE may have very different financial stability depending on leverage and interest expense.
  • ROE becomes unreliable or distorted when shareholders' equity is very low, negative, or volatile, making year-to-year comparisons difficult in turnaround or highly leveraged situations.

Related concepts

FAQ

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