- Source: Tangible common equity
Tangible common equity (TCE), the subset of shareholders' equity that is not preferred equity and not intangible assets, is an uncommonly used measure of a company's financial strength. It indicates how much ownership equity owners of common stock would receive in the event of a company's liquidation. During the financial and economic crisis of 2008–2009, it gained public popularity as a measure of the viability of large commercial banks.
When used in a ratio with tangible common assets, it measures a bank's ability to absorb losses (e.g., homeowners defaulting on mortgages) before becoming insolvent. It is one of the factors considered by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to determine if a bank has become insolvent.
Formula
TCE = total equity – intangible assets – goodwill – preferred stock
tangible assets = total assets - intangible assets - goodwill - preferred stock
TCE ratio = TCE / (tangible assets)
Leverage ratio = (total assets – intangible assets – goodwill) / TCE
Example
On February 27, 2009, the U.S. Government converted preferred shares to common shares to increase Citigroup's tangible common equity. In this example, the company's total equity remained the same, but its preferred equity decreased, thereby increasing common equity (and TCE).
See also
Bank stress tests
Return on tangible equity
Intrinsic value (finance) § Equity
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tangible common equity
- Return on tangible equity
- Book value
- Tangibility
- Asset
- TCE
- Real assets
- Capital requirement
- Intangible asset
- Texas ratio