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A company's debt-to-capital ratio or D/C ratio is the ratio of its total debt to its total capital, its debt and equity combined. The ratio measures a company's capital structure, financial solvency, and degree of leverage, at a particular point in time.[1] The data to calculate the ratio are found on the balance sheet.
Practitioners use different definitions of debt:
- Any interest-bearing liability to qualify.
- All liabilities, including accounts payable and deferred income.
- Long-term debt and its associated currently due portion (measures capital structure).
Companies alter their D/C ratio by issuing more shares, buying back shares, issuing additional debt, or retiring debt.
Definition and Details
editA measurement of a company's financial leverage, calculated as the company's debt divided by its total capital. Debt includes all short-term and long-term obligations. Total capital includes the company's debt and shareholders' equity, which includes common stock, preferred stock, minority interest and net debt.
Calculated as:
Debt-To-Capital Ratio = Debt / (Shareholder's Equity + Debt)
Companies can finance their operations through either debt or equity. The debt-to-capital ratio gives users an idea of a company's financial structure, or how it is financing its operations, along with some insight into its financial strength.
Because this is a non-GAAP measure, in practice, there are many variations of this ratio. Therefore, it is important to pay close attention when reading what is or isn't included in the ratio on a company's financial statements.
Note: Above section is copied from Investopedia website.
Interpretation
editThe higher the debt-to-capital ratio, the more debt the company has compared to its equity. This tells investors whether a company is more prone to using debt financing or equity financing. A company with high debt-to-capital ratios, compared to a general or industry average, may show weak financial strength because the cost of these debts may weigh on the company and increase its default risk.
Similarly, a lower debt-to-capital ratio will indicate that significant portion of the company's capital is funded via Equity Capital. Generally, a company with lower debt-to-capital have greater flexibility in terms of raising additional capital via Debt. Hence, management tries to maintain a healthy capital structure that does not jeopardize the company Solvency.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Hargrave, Marshall. "How to Best Use the Debt-To-Capital Ratio". Investopedia. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
External links
edit- "Debt-to-capital ratio". Investopedia.
- "Debt-to-capital ratio". Morning Star.
- "Debt-to-capital ratio". eFinance Academy. 13 February 2020.