VNET Inc Debt/Equity
What is the Debt/Equity of VNET Inc?
The Debt/Equity of VNET Group Inc is N/A
What is the definition of Debt/Equity?
Debt to equity ratio is a financial ratio indicating the relative proportion of shareholders’ equity and debt used to finance a company’s assets.
lfy (last fiscal year)
The debt to equity ratio is generally calculated by dividing debt by equity. The D/E ratio is also known as risk, gearing or leverage. The two components are often taken from the firm's balance sheet or statement of financial position (so-called book value), but the ratio may also be calculated using market values for both, if the company's debt and equity are publicly traded, or using a combination of book value for debt and market value for equity financially. Preferred stock can be considered part of debt or equity. Attributing preferred shares to one or the other is partially a subjective decision but will also take into account the specific features of the preferred shares. When used to calculate a company's financial leverage, the debt usually includes only the long-term debt.
What does VNET Inc do?
21vianet group, inc. is a leading carrier-neutral internet data center services provider in china. 21vianet provides hosting and related services, managed network services, cloud services, content delivery network services, last-mile wired broadband services and business vpn services, improving the reliability, security and speed of its customers’ internet infrastructure. customers may locate their servers and networking equipment in 21vianet’s data centers and connect to china’s internet backbone through 21vianet’s extensive fiber optic network. in addition, 21vianet’s proprietary smart routing technology enables customers’ data to be delivered across the internet in a faster and more reliable manner. 21vianet operates in more than 30 cities throughout china, servicing a diversified and loyal base of more than 2,000 hosting enterprise customers that span numerous industries ranging from internet companies to government entities and blue-chip enterprises to small- to mid-sized enterpri