What Are Financial Ratios
What Are Financial Ratios
Financial ratios are created with the use of numerical values taken
from financial statements to gain meaningful information about a
company. The numbers found on a company’s financial statements
– balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement – are used to
perform quantitative analysis and assess a company’s liquidity, leverage,
growth, margins, profitability, rates of return, valuation, and more.
Liquidity ratios
Leverage ratios
Efficiency ratios
Profitability ratios
Market value ratios
Uses and Users of Financial Ratio Analysis
Determining individual financial ratios per period and tracking the change
in their values over time is done to spot trends that may be developing in
a company. For example, an increasing debt-to-asset ratio may indicate
that a company is overburdened with debt and may eventually be facing
default risk.
Liquidity Ratios
The debt service coverage ratio reveals how easily a company can pay its
debt obligations:
Efficiency Ratios
Profitability Ratios
Profitability ratios measure a company’s ability to generate income
relative to revenue, balance sheet assets, operating costs, and equity.
Common profitability financial ratios include the following:
Learn more about the different profitability ratios in the following video:
Market value ratios are used to evaluate the share price of a company’s
stock. Common market value ratios include the following:
The book value per share ratio calculates the per-share value of a
company based on the equity available to shareholders:
Book value per share ratio = (Shareholder’s equity – Preferred equity)
/ Total common shares outstanding
The earnings per share ratio measures the amount of net income earned
for each share outstanding:
Related Readings
Thank you for reading CFI’s guide to financial ratios. To help you advance
your career in the financial services industry, check out the following
additional CFI resources: