Whether you’re an investor, a business owner, or simply someone curious about how companies evaluate their performance, financial ratios offer a quick way to assess business health. They act like performance indicators on a company’s financial report card.

Let’s break down the most important types of financial ratios, with simple examples for each.


1. Liquidity Ratios (Can the company pay its short-term bills?)

These ratios measure a company’s ability to meet short-term obligations.

  • Current Ratio:
    Formula: Current Assets / Current Liabilities
    Example: If a company has Rs 50 lakh in current assets and Rs 25 lakh in current liabilities,
    Current Ratio = 2.0 (which means it can cover its short-term dues twice over)

  • Quick Ratio (Acid-Test Ratio):
    Formula: (Current Assets – Inventory) / Current Liabilities
    Example: Same company with Rs 10 lakh worth of inventory:
    Quick Ratio = (50 – 10) / 25 = 1.6


2. Profitability Ratios (Is the company making enough money from sales?)

These show how efficiently a company converts sales into profits.

  • Gross Profit Margin:
    Formula: (Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold) / Revenue
    Example: If revenue is Rs 1 crore and COGS is Rs 60 lakh:
    Gross Profit Margin = 40%

  • Net Profit Margin:
    Formula: Net Profit / Revenue
    Example: If Net Profit is Rs 8 lakh on sales of Rs 1 crore:
    Net Profit Margin = 8%

  • Return on Equity (ROE):
    Formula: Net Profit / Shareholder Equity
    If Net Profit is Rs 10 lakh and equity is Rs 50 lakh:
    ROE = 20%


3. Leverage Ratios (Is the company taking too much debt?)

These measure the extent of financial leverage.

  • Debt-to-Equity Ratio:
    Formula: Total Debt / Shareholder’s Equity
    Example: If Debt = Rs 40 lakh and Equity = Rs 50 lakh:
    Debt-to-Equity = 0.8 (A ratio below 1 is usually seen as conservative)

  • Interest Coverage Ratio:
    Formula: EBIT / Interest Expense
    If EBIT is Rs 15 lakh and Interest Expense is Rs 3 lakh:
    Interest Coverage = 5 times (Meaning it earns 5 times more than its interest obligations)


4. Efficiency Ratios (How well is the company using its assets?)

These indicate how effectively the company uses its resources.

  • Inventory Turnover Ratio:
    Formula: Cost of Goods Sold / Average Inventory
    Example: If COGS = Rs 1 crore and Avg Inventory = Rs 20 lakh:
    Inventory Turnover = 5 times (Meaning inventory cycles 5 times a year)

  • Asset Turnover Ratio:
    Formula: Revenue / Total Assets
    If Revenue = Rs 2 crore and Assets = Rs 1 crore:
    Asset Turnover = 2 times


5. Valuation Ratios (Is the stock expensive or cheap?)

Used mostly by investors.

  • Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio:
    Formula: Share Price / Earnings per Share (EPS)
    If share price is Rs 200 and EPS is Rs 10:
    P/E = 20 times (Means investors are paying Rs 20 for every Re 1 of earnings)

  • Price-to-Book (P/B) Ratio:
    Formula: Market Price per Share / Book Value per Share
    If Market Price = Rs 300 and Book Value = Rs 150:
    P/B = 2.0


Summary:

Ratio Type Example Ratio Why it matters
Liquidity Current Ratio Can the company pay bills soon?
Profitability Net Profit Margin How much is it earning from sales?
Leverage Debt-to-Equity Ratio Is it over-borrowed?
Efficiency Inventory Turnover Is it using assets well?
Valuation P/E Ratio Is the stock cheap or expensive?

Final Tip:

Always compare ratios against industry averages and historical company data. One ratio alone never tells the full story.