We ranked the 100 largest publicly traded banks and thrifts on eight measures of financial health: return on average equity; net interest margin; nonperforming loans (NPLs) as a percentage of loans; nonperforming assets as percentage of assets; reserves as a percentage of NPLs; two capital ratios (Tier 1 and risk-based); and leverage ratio. The data is provided by Charlottesville, Va., financial data provider
SNL Financial, but Forbes compiles the ranking of the best and worst banks based on an average of the individual ranks of each metric.
(Photo via Forbes)
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America’s Largest Private Companies See More of America’s Best Banks See More of America’s Worst Banks The opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Comcast.