Business & Finance

What is Debt-to-Equity Ratio?

A financial ratio comparing a company's total debt to its shareholders' equity, measuring how much the business relies on borrowed money versus owner investment.

How It Works

The Debt-to-Equity (D/E) ratio reveals a company's capital structure — how it finances its operations through debt versus equity. A ratio of 1.0 means equal debt and equity. Higher ratios indicate more leverage (riskier but potentially higher returns). Lower ratios suggest conservative financing (safer but potentially lower returns). Lenders use D/E to assess credit risk. Industry norms vary widely — capital-intensive industries typically have higher D/E ratios, while service businesses have lower ones.

Formula

Debt-to-Equity Ratio = Total Liabilities ÷ Shareholders' Equity

Real-World Example

A company has Total Liabilities of ₹30,00,000 and Shareholders' Equity of ₹20,00,000. D/E Ratio = 1.5, meaning the company uses ₹1.50 of debt for every ₹1 of equity. This is moderately leveraged.

Why It Matters

1

Ensures accurate financial reporting and record-keeping

2

Helps maintain regulatory and tax compliance

3

Enables better-informed business decisions

4

Improves operational efficiency and cash flow management

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good debt-to-equity ratio?

Generally, below 2.0 is considered acceptable. Below 1.0 is conservative. Above 2.0 may indicate excessive leverage. However, this varies by industry — real estate and manufacturing companies naturally have higher D/E ratios than technology firms.

Why do some companies have high D/E ratios?

Debt can be cheaper than equity (interest is tax-deductible, dividends aren't). Companies with stable cash flows may use debt strategically to amplify returns for shareholders. This is called financial leverage. The risk is that debt obligations remain fixed even when revenue drops.

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