Financial Ratio Analysis: The Health Checkup of a Business
Imagine you want to bet on a race. There are two runners:
- Runner A: Runs 100 meters in 12 seconds.
- Runner B: Runs 200 meters in 20 seconds.
Who is faster? You can't compare them directly because the distances are different. To compare them fairly, you need a Ratio (Speed = Distance / Time).
In the stock market, you cannot compare a giant like Reliance directly with a smaller company like Dabur just by looking at their profits. You need Financial Ratios to bring them to a level playing field. Ratios tell you the "speed," "strength," and "endurance" of a company.
The Golden Rule: A single number (like Profit) is meaningless without context. Ratios provide that context by comparing two relevant numbers.
1. The Four Pillars of Ratio Analysis
Just like a doctor checks your BP, Sugar, Heart Rate, and Weight, a financial analyst checks four types of ratios to judge a company's health:
1. Liquidity Ratios
"Can it pay bills today?"
Measures short-term survival.
2. Solvency Ratios
"Will it go bankrupt?"
Measures long-term debt health.
3. Profitability Ratios
"Is it making money?"
Measures efficiency and margins.
4. Valuation Ratios
"Is it cheap or expensive?"
Measures the stock price vs value.
2. Liquidity Ratios: The Survival Test
If a company cannot pay its suppliers or salaries next month, it will die, even if it has huge factories.
A. Current Ratio
Scenario: You have ₹200 in your pocket (Assets) and you owe your friend ₹100 today (Liabilities). Your Ratio is 2:1. You are safe.
- Ideal: Above 1.5 (Safe).
- Danger: Below 1.0 (You owe more than you have).
3. Solvency Ratios: The Debt Trap Check
This checks if the company is drowning in long-term loans.
B. Debt-to-Equity Ratio
If you start a business with ₹50 of your money (Equity) and ₹50 loan (Debt), your ratio is 1:1.
- Low (< 1): Safe. The company uses its own money.
- High (> 2): Risky. The company is running on borrowed money. If profits dip, interest payments will kill it.
4. Profitability Ratios: The Efficiency Meter
Just because a company sells a lot doesn't mean it keeps a lot.
C. Net Profit Margin
If you sell a pen for ₹10 and your profit is ₹2, your margin is 20%.
Comparison:
Supermarkets have low margins (2-3%).
Software companies have high margins (20-30%).
Always compare companies within the SAME industry!
D. Return on Equity (ROE)
This is the shareholder's favorite. It tells you how well the company uses your money.
If you give a company ₹100 and they generate ₹15 profit, ROE is 15%. Generally, an ROE consistently above 15-20% indicates a high-quality business (like Asian Paints or TCS).
5. Valuation Ratios: The Price Tag
Is the stock cheap or expensive? This is the million-dollar question.
E. Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio
This tells you how much you are paying for ₹1 of profit.
-
Example:
Company A makes ₹10 profit per share. The stock price is ₹200.
P/E = 200 / 10 = 20x .
This means you are paying ₹20 to buy ₹1 of their earnings.
High P/E:
Investors expect high growth (e.g., Tesla, Amazon). Or, the stock is overvalued.
Low P/E:
The company is stagnant, or it is a hidden gem (undervalued).
6. Summary Checklist for Investors
| Category | Key Ratio | Good Sign 👍 | Bad Sign 👎 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liquidity | Current Ratio | > 1.5 | < 1.0 |
| Solvency | Debt-to-Equity | < 1.0 | > 2.0 |
| Profitability | ROE | > 15% | < 10% |
| Valuation | P/E Ratio | Industry Avg | Very High |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most important ratio?
There is no single "best" ratio. However, for long-term investors, ROE (Return on Equity) is often considered the most important as it measures how efficiently a company generates profits from shareholders' money.
What is a good Current Ratio?
A Current Ratio between 1.5 and 2.0 is generally considered healthy. If it's too high (e.g., > 3), it might mean the company is hoarding cash efficiently. If it's too low (< 1), they might face liquidity problems.
Can a company have high profits but be unhealthy?
Yes! A company can show high Net Profit (Profitability) but have zero cash in the bank (Liquidity issue) or massive loans (Solvency issue). That is why you must check all categories of ratios, not just one.