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Goldman Sachs's return on equity used to average 20-30% before the crisis. Now a decade after the crisis they're glad to be doing more than 10%.

https://i.imgur.com/gtE05WX.png



I’m on mobile so I can’t read the numbers on the excel screenshot you provided but the historic high return on average equity for banks[1] (not including brokerage) was 16.29% in 1999. At last measure it was 11.85%. Dodd-Frank was merely a speed bump. The vast majority of banks have long since recovered from the crisis.

[1] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/USROE


That's not a good chart for banks. Their cost of capital is 8-10%, doing 11 or 12% is pretty shitty compared to the pre-crisis era.

And the smaller community banks have less onerous regulations than the big ones. Banks have to be much more capitalized and have less leverage because of Dodd-Frank. That's why the return on equity is mediocre.


While I'm not personally keen on him, Trump's admin rolled back CCAR to every 4 years, for small book every 6. Expect lower regulatory costs.


Whats the app you used to get so much history


FactSet




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