The expense ratio of a stock or asset fund is the total percentage of fund assets used for administrative, management, advertising (12b-1), and all other expenses. An expense ratio of 1% per annum means that each year 1% of the fund's total assets will be used to cover expenses. The expense ratio does not include sales loads or brokerage commissions. Expense ratios are important to consider when choosing a fund, as they can significantly affect returns. Factors influencing the expense ratio include the size of the fund (small funds often have higher ratios as they spread expenses among a smaller number of investors), sales charges, and the management style of the fund. A typical annual expense ratio for a U.S. domestic stock fund is about 1%, although some passively managed funds (such as index funds) have significantly lower ratios. One notable component of the expense ratio of U.S. funds is the "12b-1 fee", which represents expenses used for advertising and promotion of the fund. 12b-1 fees are generally limited to a maximum of 1.00% per year (.75% distribution and .25% shareholder servicing) under Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Rules. The term "expense ratio" is also a key measure of performance for a nonprofit organization. The term is sometimes used in other contexts as well. (Wikipedia).
This video defines a ratio and provides several examples on how to write a ratio and shows how to simplify a ratio. http://mathispower4u.wordpress.com/
From playlist Ratios and Rates
This is a short video tutorial on unit ratios...also called unit rates. For interactive applets, worksheets, and more videos go to http://www.mathvillage.info
From playlist All about ratios and proportions
Ratios Introduction - what are ratios?
Ratios are used to compare different quantities. In this introduction to ratios we will look at what ratios are, how we deal with ratios of different measurement units and that ratios can be simplified. To donate to the tecmath channel:https://paypal.me/tecmath To support tecmath on Pa
From playlist Ratios
Ex: Find the Average Cost Function and Minimize the Average Cost
This video explains how to find the average cost function and find the minimum average cost given the total cost function. Site: http://mathispower4u.com
From playlist Applications of Differentiation – Maximum/Minimum/Optimization Problems
Ex 1: Cost Function Applications - Marginal Cost, Average Cost, Minimum Average Cost
This video explains how several application of the cost function including total cost, marginal cost, average cost, and minimum average cost. The total cost function is a quadratic function. Site: http://mathispower4u.com
From playlist Applications of Differentiation – Maximum/Minimum/Optimization Problems
Mod-07 Lec-18 Financial Statements Analysis - Dabur India Case
Managerial Accounting by Dr. Varadraj Bapat,Department of Management,IIT Bombay.For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in
From playlist IIT Bombay: Managerial Accounting | CosmoLearning.org Accounting
This video explains how to use fundamental analysis to determine if a company may be undervalued or overvalued by using valuation ratios such as the price to book ratio, price to sales, & price to earnings ratio. It also explains how to determine if a company may go bankrupt using the deb
From playlist Stocks and Bonds
Build With Magnimetrics: Debt Covenants Tutorial [Free FP&A Software]
Grab your FREE Magnimetrics account here: https://app.magnimetrics.com/auth/signup Download Source Files here: https://magnimetrics.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Company-Financials_CY2018-CY2020.xlsx https://magnimetrics.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Company-Financials_CY2021-CY2022.xls
From playlist Learn Magnimetrics
Liquidity Ratios - Current Ratio and Quick Ratio (Acid Test Ratio)
This finance video tutorial provides a basic introduction into two liquidity ratios - the current ratio and the quick ratio also known as the acid test ratio. The current ratio is equal to the current assets divided by the current liabilities. A current ratio that is greater than 1 means
From playlist Stocks and Bonds
Accounting Lecture 17 - Corporate Income Statement
From the free study guides and course manuals at www.my-accounting-tutor.com. Introduction to the corporate income statement, including income from continuing operations, restructuring charges, fixed asset impairments, extraordinary gains and losses, and results from discontinued operation
From playlist Accounting Lectures
Highline Excel 2016 Class 04: References: Relative, Absolute, Mixed, Sheet, Workbook, 3-D, Table…
Download Files: https://people.highline.edu/mgirvin/AllClasses/218_2016/218Excel2016.htm In this video learn about: (00:04) Download Files (00:30) Introduction to types of References 1. (01:38) Example 1: Not Copying Formula. Goal: Calculate Net Income. 2. (02:09) Example 2: Not Copying Fo
From playlist Excel Advanced Free Course at YouTube. Comprehensive Excel 2016: Calculations & Data Analysis (27 Videos)
FRM: Risk-adjusted return on capital (RAROC)
RAROC is a risk-adjusted performance measure (RAPM): risk-adjusted return divided by economic capital (i.e., the capital reserved to cover unexpected losses). For more financial risk videos, visit our website! http://www.bionicturtle.com
From playlist Performance measures
Return on Investment with Delta Math
In this video, we look at a return on investment practice problem on Delta Math.
From playlist Personal Finance
P/E discussion | Stocks and bonds | Finance & Capital Markets | Khan Academy
Courses on Khan Academy are always 100% free. Start practicing—and saving your progress—now: https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/core-finance/stock-and-bonds/valuation-and-investing/v/p-e-discussion Discussion of the price-to-earnings ratio. Created by Sal Khan. Watch th
From playlist Stocks and bonds | Finance and Capital Markets | Khan Academy
Example: Determine the Best Buy Using Unit Rate
This video determines the cost of an item per ounce to determine the best buy using unit rate. Complete Video List at http://www.mathispower4u.com
From playlist Ratios and Rates