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Return on Equity is a metric used to evaluate a company's performance by its common

stockholders. The average ROE is 4.32 percent. Clearly, the company has been able
to leverage its long-term debt into a healthy profit, providing a welcome boost to
the returns it pays its shareholders. The maximum ROE earned was 16.12% in 2021.
The standard deviation of ROE is 4.71%. It means common stockholders can expect a
steady return.
The current ratio is the ability to pay off short-term debts. The higher the value,
the more likely you can pay off short-term loans and operating expenses. On the
other hand, a higher current ratio balance means you have too much cash, too much
inventory, and uncollected receivables. Even though the best ratio varies from
industry to industry. Quick ratio measures the same things about the ability to pay
short-term debts, but it does not include inventories. Because inventory is the
least liquid asset. From the table above, we can see that both the mean and the
median of the current ratio and the quick ratio are higher than 2:1 and 1:1,
respectively. The maximum value of the current and quick ratio is on per, but
sometimes the minimum value is below the standard line. In 2012, the current ratio
was 1.74:1 and the quick ratio was 0.64:1. Standard both the current and quick
ratios have a difference of more than 20%. That is 20% and 23,41%, respectively,
which might be something to worry about. Because they show that the current and
quick ratios are quite different from the average or mean values.

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