Business Current Ratio
Quick summary: The current ratio is a liquidity metric that shows a company’s ability to pay short-term obligations using short-term assets. It’s a first-line health check for working-capital sufficiency.
Definition & Formula
The current ratio measures short-term liquidity:
Current Ratio = Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities
Current assets typically include cash, marketable securities, accounts receivable and inventory. Current liabilities include accounts payable, short-term debt, and other obligations due within 12 months.
Worked Example
Assume a company reports:
Item | Amount (USD) |
---|---|
Cash & equivalents | $20,000 |
Accounts receivable | $50,000 |
Inventory | $50,000 |
Total current assets | $120,000 |
Accounts payable | $30,000 |
Short-term loans | $30,000 |
Total current liabilities | $60,000 |
Current Ratio = $120,000 ÷ $60,000 = 2.0
Interpretation: the company has $2.00 of current assets for every $1.00 of current liabilities — generally considered comfortable liquidity.
Benchmarks & Interpretation
- < 1.0 — warning sign: current liabilities exceed current assets (possible liquidity risk).
- ~1.0–1.5 — acceptable for some industries (tight working capital), but monitor collections & payables.
- ~1.5–3.0 — typically healthy for many companies (balance between liquidity & efficient asset use).
- > 3.0 — could indicate overly conservative asset holding or inefficient capital use (e.g., too much cash or inventory).
Ideal ranges vary by industry: retailers often run lower ratios (inventory-heavy), service firms may have higher ratios (less inventory).
Limitations & Caveats
- The ratio is a snapshot — seasonal businesses may show misleading values at different times.
- It treats all current assets equally; inventory may not be quickly convertible to cash.
- Doesn’t measure profitability or long-term solvency (use alongside profitability & leverage ratios).
- Off-balance-sheet items or contingent liabilities can distort true liquidity risk.
Practical Ways to Improve Current Ratio
- Improve collections: tighten credit terms, offer early-pay discounts, or use factoring.
- Manage inventory: reduce slow-moving stock with promotions or JIT purchasing.
- Refinance short-term debt: move to longer-term financing to reduce current liabilities.
- Increase cash reserves: delay non-critical capital spending or improve margins to generate cash.
- Negotiate payables: extend supplier terms where possible without penalties.
Related KPIs to Monitor
- Quick Ratio (acid-test) = (Cash + AR + Marketable securities) ÷ Current Liabilities — excludes inventory.
- Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) — speed of collecting receivables.
- Inventory Turnover — how quickly inventory converts to sales/cash.
- Current Debt Coverage — ability to cover near-term debt obligations from cash flows.
Summary
The current ratio is an essential, easy-to-calculate liquidity indicator. Use it as an early warning or confirmation tool — but always interpret it alongside industry context, cash-flow analysis, and other financial ratios to get a complete picture of a company’s short-term financial health.