Talk:Efficiency ratio

Latest comment: 16 years ago by 61.88.56.214 in topic Cost-income ratio

See also edit

The Sortino Ratio measures the efficiency of an investment strategey relative to a specified, target rate of return. Thus the Sortino Ratio should be under the See Also section.

NOTE - I dont really know how to format the page so if someone could clean what I did up under the see also page Thanks!

Cost-income ratio edit

Isn't this ratio usually called the cost-income ratio? Lachambre 09:13, 12 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

This is actually what I was thinking, but I'm not really sure if they're one and the same. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 61.88.56.214 (talk) 22:24, 6 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Risk-adjusted efficiency ratio edit

How is a risk-adjusted efficiency ratio defined? --Cryout 15:39, 22 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

Please fix last part of the article, hidden and copied hereby edit

I hid the below paragraph since the statement makes no sense in the context – it inverts numerator and denominator in the definition –, and the numbers thrown there make no immediate (or even immediately mediate) sense with regard to the numbers above, and even hardly match with the very statement (an inverted ratio, a "1-" difference...). Can anybody fix it, please.

If it's calculated as revenue divided by expenses (interest expense, "benefits, claims, and credit losses", operating expenses) it becomes 1 minus the "income from continuing operations" margin. 68,380 / 94,713 = 0.72