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Business Financials – Debt to Equity ratio formula and how to calculate and use it
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Published on Friday, 10 February 2023 12:04
A common ratio/formula is the Debt to Equity (D/E) ratio formula showing us a measure of a company’s financial leverage (borrowings) and we calculate it by dividing its total liabilities by stockholders’ equity. Use it to know what proportion of debt compared to equity (ownership/shareholder value) the company is using to finance its activities.
The ratio formula is:
***Note – Sometimes only the interest-bearing, long-term debt is used instead of total liabilities in the calculation.
How It Works/Example:
Let’s assume Company ABC has:
- Total liabilities were $10,000,000; and
- Shareholders’ equity of $20,000,000, and
then we can calculate Debt to Equity as:
D /E = $10,000,000/$20,000,000 = 0.5 or 50%
This means that Company ABC has Debt that is 50% of shareholders’ equity.
Having a high D/E ratio generally means investors say the company has been aggressive in financing its growth with debt. However, this can result in volatile earnings as a result of fluctuating interest rates.
But if debt is raised, to finance increased operations (high debt to equity), the company has the potential to generate more earnings than it would have without this outside financing.
The D/E ratio is also closely monitored by the lenders and creditors of a company, since it can provide early warning that an organization is too weighted by debt that it is unable to meet its payment obligations. There can also be a funding issue. For example, the owners of a business may not have/want to contribute any more cash to the company, so they acquire more debt to address the cash shortfall.
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