Liquidity ratios determine if a business has the liquid assets to meet its current financial obligations without raising additional cash. They’re a group of financial measurements that calculate a company’s ability to satisfy its near-term financial obligations with current assets on its balance sheet or operating cash flow.
What are liquidity ratios?
Liquidity is the lifeblood of a business. If a company doesn’t have enough liquid assets (i.e., things it can convert to cash quickly, like marketable securities, accounts receivable, and inventory) to meet its current financial obligations, it might need to declare bankruptcy.
Liquidity ratios help determine if a company has adequate liquidity to cover its current liabilities. Note that these are different from solvency ratios.
Liquidity ratios measure a company’s ability to meet its current liabilities (i.e., those due within the next year). Solvency measures a company’s ability to meet its financial obligations over the long term.
What are some important liquidity ratios?
There are several types of liquidity ratios. They use different inputs from a company’s balance sheet or cash flow statement to determine its liquidity. Here are the four most important liquidity ratios:
1. The cash ratio
The cash ratio is the narrowest look at a company’s liquidity. It calculates a company’s liquidity using only its cash and equivalents on its balance sheet compared to its current liabilities.
The formula for the cash ratio is: cash ratio = (cash + cash equivalents) / current liabilities
2. The quick ratio
The quick ratio is the next level of a liquidity ratio. It adds a company’s accounts receivable to its current assets since it should receive that cash over the next several weeks or months. The company should collect this money relatively quickly, hence the ratio’s name.
The formula for quick ratio is: Quick ratio = (cash + cash equivalents + accounts receivable) / current liabilities
3. The current ratio
The current ratio (also sometimes called the working capital ratio) builds upon the quick ratio by adding inventory into the mix. A company’s inventory is the finished products it could turn into cash in a relatively short period if it needed the funds.
The formula for the current ratio is: Current ratio = current assets (cash and equivalents + accounts receivable + inventory) / current liabilities
4. The operating cash flow ratio
The cash, quick, and current ratio calculates a company’s liquidity based on inputs from its balance sheet. The operating cash flow ratio looks at liquidity through the lens of a company’s cash flow statement. It examines whether a company generates enough operating cash flow to meet its financial obligations.
The formula for the operating cash flow ratio is: Operating cash flow / current liabilities
Why are liquidity ratios important?
Liquidity ratios provide a sense of a company’s financial health. They show whether a company has adequate liquidity to meet its upcoming financial obligations or if it might face a liquidity crunch.
A liquidity ratio of 1 or more suggests a company has more than enough liquid assets to cover its current liabilities. The higher the liquidity ratio, the better because it implies the company has ample access to the liquid funds needed to meet its current liabilities.
A liquidity ratio of less than 1 is a warning sign. The level suggests the company might need to raise outside capital (e.g., selling assets, issuing stock, or borrowing more money) to help cover its current liabilities. If a company can’t access external capital, it might declare bankruptcy.
Examples of liquidity ratios in action
Engineering behemoth Rolls-Royce (LSE:RR.) ended its first half of 2023 with £2.861bn of cash & equivalents, £6.745bn of net accounts receivable, and £5.129bn of inventory. The company had £14.748bn of total current liabilities. Meanwhile, Rolls-Royce’s cash flow statement showed £1.850bn in net cash from operating activities.
Here’s a snapshot of Rolls-Royce’s liquidity using the four common liquidity ratios:
- Cash ratio: £2.861bn / £14.748bn = 0.194
- Quick ratio: £9.606bn / £14.748bn = 0.651
- Current ratio: £14.735bn /£14.748bn = 0.999
- Operating cash flow ratio: £1.850bn / £14.748bn = 0.125
These calculations showcase that Rolls-Royce has weak liquidity with limited resources to meet its current liabilities. The weak liquidity suggests the company is in poor financial shape.