$0.18 = $0.
So since the total increase in the percentage of assets you lose is 0.
It turns out that each asset you lose increases the percentage of your total assets that you lose by 1. So if you have 100 assets and the total amount you lose is 50, then you will lose 0.50 of those assets.
So return on assets is the percentage of assets you lose by each loss. The numerator is the total amount of assets you lose, so the numerator will include the amount you lose by each loss. The denominator is the total number of assets, so it will include the amount you lose by each loss.
Let’s do this a different way so you can get the numbers more easily. If you want to calculate how much each loss increases the total amount you lose, you divide the total amount of assets you lose by the total amount you lose. This will give you the numerator. You then take the numerator and divide it by the total amount of assets you lose. You take the denominator and multiply it by the total number of assets you have.
In the past we used to use 3 to mean the sum of assets you have or you have not. Now we can’t use 3 for a total number of assets. We can use 4 to mean the sum of assets you have or you have not.
As a rough approximation, 3.5 is the most you should use for roa. If you have lots of money invested in assets, you might want to use more.
In the past, roa was based on a simple ratio of assets to assets lost. Now it’s based on assets per asset loss. This is because more assets are more costly to lose than fewer assets.
roa is the amount of money that would be earned if assets were not lost and lost at the same rate. By the way, if you have assets, you can use roa to calculate your risk-taking and investment performance.