Financial Ratio | |||
Working Capital | = = | Current Assets – Current Liabilities $89,000 – $61,000 $28,000 | An indicator of whether the company will be able to meet its current obligations (pay its bills, meet its payroll, make a loan payment, etc.) If a company has current assets exactly equal to current liabilities, it has no working capital. The greater the amount of working capital the more likely it will be able to make its payments on time. |
Current Ratio | = = | Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities $89,000 ÷ $61,000 1.46 | This tells you the relationship of current assets to current liabilities. A ratio of 3:1 is better than 2:1. A 1:1 ratio means there is no working capital. |
Quick Ratio (Acid Test Ratio) | = = = | [(Cash + Temp. Investments + Accounts Receivable) ÷ Current Liabilities] : 1 [($2,100 + $100 + $10,000 + $40,500) ÷ $61,000] : 1 [$52,700 ÷ $61,000] : 1 0.86 : 1 | This ratio is similar to the current ratio except that Inventory, Supplies, and Prepaid Expenses are excluded. This indicates the relationship between the amount of assets that can quickly be turned into cash versus the amount of current liabilities. |
Four financial ratios relate balance sheet amounts for Accounts Receivable and Inventoryto income statement amounts. To illustrate these financial ratios we will use the following income statement information:
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