Ratios Made Simple: A beginner's guide to the key financial ratios
By Robert Leach
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About this ebook
'Ratios Made Simple' looks at ratios from the perspective of an investor, providing a toolkit for investors to use to accurately analyse a company from its accounts. This book is divided into nine chapters, with each chapter looking at a different aspect of potential concern to an investor:
1. Profitability Ratios
2. Investment Ratios
3. Dividend Cover
4. Margins
5. Gearing
6. Solvency Ratios
7. Efficiency Ratios
8. Policy Ratios
9. Volatility
For each ratio, financial expert Robert Leach provides a detailed definition, explains how it works, describes its use. Investors are also given a simple explanation of how to calculate each ratio, what the ratio means and how the investor should apply the answers in making investment decisions.
This book provides the investor with an essential guide to the use of these powerful analytical tools - tools that should form a vital part of an investor's decision-making process.
Robert Leach
Robert Leach FCCA FIPPM ACertCM is a certified accountant, private investor and author of over 30 books. His titles include How to Make Money on the Stock Exchange (Foulsham), Financial Times Guide to Your Company Pension, Allied Dunbar Guide to Financial Planning for the Over 50's and The Investor's Guide to Understanding Accounts. For two years he was a judge of the Stock Exchange Awards for best published accounts. He is the author of the looseleaf works Payroll Factbook and Tax Factbook published by Sweet & Maxwell. He also writes for newsletters, magazines, newspapers and anyone else who will pay him. www.robertleach.co.uk
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Ratios Made Simple - Robert Leach
Publishing details
HARRIMAN HOUSE LTD
3A Penns Road
Petersfield
Hampshire
GU32 2EW
GREAT BRITAIN
Tel: +44 (0)1730 233870
Fax: +44 (0)1730 233880
Email: enquiries@harriman-house.com
Website: www.harriman-house.com
First published in Great Britain in 2010
Copyright © Harriman House Ltd
The right of Robert Leach to be identified as Author has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988.
ISBN: 978-0-85719-082-6
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A CIP catalogue record for this book can be obtained from the British Library.
All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the Publisher. This book may not be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise disposed of by way of trade in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published without the prior written consent of the Publisher.
Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners.
No responsibility for loss occasioned to any person or corporate body
acting or refraining to act as a result of reading material in this book
can be accepted by the Publisher or by the Author.
About the Author
Robert Leach FCCA ACA is a chartered accountant, lecturer and author of more than 40 books, mainly on financial topics. His books include The Investor’s Guide to Understanding Accounts. For two years he was a judge of the Stock Exchange Awards for best published accounts. He has written encyclopaedias on tax and payroll, and also writes for newsletters, magazines, newspapers and anyone else who will pay him.
Introduction
What is a ratio?
A ratio is simply one number divided by another. In financial terms, an accounting ratio is (usually) one figure from a set of accounts divided by another figure.
As even the simplest balance sheet and profit and loss (P&L) account is likely to contain at least 50 figures, there is a potential to produce 2500 ratios just from these two financial statements. This is before we look at other statements and the notes to the accounts. However, many of these ratios would be meaningless. Only a few ratios produce a number which will assist an investor.
This book lists the main ratios in categories of what they are indicating. These categories are listed in approximate order of relevance to the investor. Each ratio is defined and explained, before comment is given on how an investor should use it. Where alternatives to the ratios (or variations on them) exist these are indicated throughout the text.
Calculating ratios from company accounts
When calculating any ratio, make sure that you use the group accounts or consolidated accounts of the company. (These have the same meaning.) Almost all companies now operate as a group of companies. That means there is a holding company which itself owns shares in other companies known as subsidiaries. Often these subsidiaries have their own subsidiaries, known as sub-subsidiaries. This creates a family tree which can often have more than 100 companies in it. This is known as a group of companies. By law, the holding company must publish a separate set of accounts, but these are of no interest to the investor and should be ignored.
Copies of the accounts of a listed public company are usually put on the company’s website, which can easily be found by typing the company’s name into Google or any other search engine. The website may have a section for investors which includes all annual accounts for several years, with half-yearly reports and other announcements. Published accounts may also be requested from the company directly. Many companies also offer their accounts through the free Annual Reports Service, based in Surbiton: www.orderannualreports.com
Ratios may generally be applied to smaller private companies. The accounts of smaller firms are not so readily available as those of larger firms, except that they must be filed at Companies House from where they are available to the public for a fee. In practice, if you are invited to invest in a private company, the existing shareholders will provide you with the accounts and much extra information also.
When ratios are calculated, figures are taken from the balance sheet or P&L account. In addition, many ratios require you to know other figures such as the share price, which can be found from the Financial Times or from many other publications and websites.
The accounts include other financial statements, such as cash flow statements, in addition to narrative reports and notes to the accounts. These are all important to the investor, but are little use in calculating ratios.
Understanding a ratio
A ratio by itself is usually a meaningless number. Knowing that the working capital ratio of a company is 1.3 tells you nothing about whether the company is a good investment or not. It does not even tell you whether a company is financially sound. Such a ratio means different things in different sectors.
A ratio must almost always be compared with other companies, or a trend must be reviewed, for it to be useful. A comparison is usually made with similar-sized companies in the same general industry. A trend is observed by looking at the same ratio for the same company in different years; an investor may sometimes plot the same ratio for the same company in different years to detect a trend.
Observing trends in this way is fine for established companies, but can be a problem for young companies. It is generally impossible to establish any trend for the first three years of a company’s existence. Even after that, a young company’s ratios can be volatile, as small changes in performance can lead to large changes in ratio figures.
Each ratio is intended to assist the process of identifying some aspect of a company, such as its profitability, efficiency or liquidity. Calculating all the possible ratios for all companies is likely to be tedious. Even if all the ratios are calculated for a company, many will not reveal anything of significance.
In calculating a ratio, you must remember that almost all accounts have an element of opinion. Someone will have had to provide estimated answers to questions such as:
What is the value of this property?
How many years will this machinery last?
Will this debtor pay their bill?
All of these opinions are reflected in the accounts you use. If the directors’ (or their accountants’) opinions are wrong, your accounting ratios will similarly be wrong.
As mentioned above, accounting ratios rely heavily on the principle of comparability of different companies and of single companies through time. Changes in accounting standards, such as the widespread adoption of fair value accounting, can have the effect of distorting comparability.
If you are looking at a ratio, ensure you make use of what it tells you. Ratios can be effective as early indicators of problems. The company will always be able to spin a story as to why this is not a problem. Remember that the spin doctor has a motive; your calculator does not.
How investors should use ratios
In all cases, before investing in a company the investor must know what that company does. Never invest in anything you do not understand. If you do not know what a hedge fund or reinsurance company does, do not even consider investing in one until you find out. Understanding the company’s activity is an essential prerequisite to understanding accounting ratios and to other aspects of investment policy-making.
There is no ratio that tells you whether a company is a good investment.
It is not possible to perform a calculation which tells you how good the company is as an investment. Ratios may indicate that a company is profitable, growing, pays good dividends, is saving enough, is well-managed and so on. This can all be useful information, but none of these factors indicate that the company is a good investment.
Be wary about thinking that accounting ratios will help you discover some investment opportunity that everyone else has overlooked. The