By definition, the answer is no.
Total liabilities include current and long term liabilities and the sum is "Total Liabilities".
Looking at the definition below, the difference between "total liabilities" and "total assets" results in the SH equity.
Shareholders' Equity = Total Assets - Total Liabilities
Yes shareholders fund is same as equity and these are different names of same thing.
On a balance sheet there are three things: Assets, Liabilities, Shareholders Equity. A share of stock is Equity, namely a portion of the company and its earnings not owned by the company, traded for something (most often cash). It is a liability because represents a demand on the company assets. Specifically a share of stock is a demand on the companies assets after all other demands are discharged. total assets - total liabilities = shareholders equity A share of stock repersents a demand for one slice of the equity.
Total Assets = Total liabilities + owner equity Total Assets = 50% liability + 50% equity 824580 = 824580*50% + 50% owner equity Owner Equity = 100% total Assets - 50% liability Owner Equity =824580 - 412290 Owner Equity = 412290
Shareholders Equity (for a corporation) or Net Worth (for an individual)
Debt to Equity ratio =Total liabilities / equity Debt to equity ratio = 105000 / 31000 = 3.387
Total equity and common equity are separate things where there is preference shares are also issued in that case only shares issued to common share holders are included in common equity while in total equity shares issued to preference shareholders are also included.
yes
Since ROE = ROA (Equity Multiplier) in order for ROE to equal ROA the equity multiplier must be one. In other words, the total assets to total shareholders' equity ratio must be one.
not provided, as the information given does not include the total debt amount.
Total equity does not include total liabilities so both are not same
Retained earnings is part of shareholders' equity. It is considered part of equity because it represents the profits that are retained in the company to fund growth. If a company would have paid out all past profits as dividend, then total assets (cash) would be lower, and retained earnings would have a zero balance. Because net income is computed after claims of third parties (interest, wages, etc), there is no claim of third parties on profits that are retained. So, retained earnings are not a liability.
the liabilites and the owners equity