Here are a few methods for measuring a company’s liquidity.
Calculate the Company’s Current Ratio
Current Ratio = Current Assets/Current Liabilities. In the balance sheet, you can see the highlighted numbers. Those are the ones you use for the calculation. For 2021, the calculation would be: Current Ratio = $708/$540 = 1.311 X This means that the firm can meet its current short-term debt obligations 1.311 times over. To stay solvent, the firm must have a current ratio of at least one, which means it can exactly meet its current debt obligations. In other words, this firm is solvent. However, in this case, the firm is a little more liquid than that. It can meet its current debt obligations and have a little left over. If you calculate the current ratio for 2020, you will see that the current ratio was 1.182.
Calculate the Company’s Quick Ratio or Acid Test
The second step in liquidity analysis is to calculate the company’s quick ratio or acid test. The quick ratio is a more stringent test of liquidity than the current ratio. It looks at how well the company can quickly meet its short-term debt obligations without taking the time to sell any of its inventory to do so. Inventory is the least liquid of all the current assets because you have to find a buyer for your inventory. Finding a buyer, especially in a slow economy, is not always possible. Therefore, firms want to be able to meet their short-term debt obligations without having to rely on selling inventory. The formula is: Quick Ratio = Current Assets-Inventory/Current Liabilities. In the balance sheet, you can see the highlighted numbers. Those are the ones you use for the calculation. For 2021, the calculation would be: Quick Ratio = $708-$422/$540 = 0.529 X. This means that the firm cannot meet its current short-term debt obligations without selling inventory because the quick ratio is 0.529, which is less than one. However, in this case, the firm will have to sell inventory to pay its short-term debt. If you calculate the quick ratio for 2020, you will see that it was 0.458. The firm improved its liquidity by 2021 which, in this case, is good, as it is operating with relatively low liquidity. It needs to improve its quick ratio to above one so it won’t have to sell inventory to meet its short-term debt obligations.
Calculate the Company’s Net Working Capital
A company’s net working capital is the difference between its current assets and current liabilities: Net Working Capital = Current Assets - Current Liabilities For 2021, this company’s net working capital would be: $708 - 540 = $168 From this calculation, you know you have positive net working capital with which to pay short-term debt obligations before you even calculate the current ratio. You should be able to see the relationship between the company’s net working capital and its current ratio. For 2020, the company’s net working capital was $99, so its net working capital position, and, thus, its liquidity position, has improved from 2020 to 2021.
Summary of Liquidity Analysis
Looking at this summary, the company improved its liquidity position from 2020 to 2021, as indicated by all three metrics. The current ratio and the net working capital positions both improved. The quick ratio shows that the company has to sell inventory to meet its current debt obligations, but the quick ratio is also improving. For a true analysis of this firm, it also is important to examine data for this firm’s industry. Although it’s helpful to have two years of data for the firm, which provides information on the trend in the ratios, it is also important to compare the firm’s ratios with the industry.
The Bottom Line
These three measurements are important first steps in gauging your company’s liquidity. Start with these calculations to get a general sense of how your business’s finances are doing. Then, compare your results to others in the industry, as well as other periods in your business’s history. Financial data only becomes useful when it is compared to similar companies or historical data.