Financial statements contain thousands of numbers. Ratios distill them into actionable insights. They answer questions like: Can we pay our bills? Are we profitable enough? Are we using resources efficiently? How much debt is too much?
Can the business pay its short-term obligations?
How effectively does the business generate profit?
How well does the business use its resources?
How much debt does the business carry?
Compare ratios across 3-5 periods. A declining current ratio over quarters signals growing liquidity risk.
Compare against industry averages. A 40% gross margin in retail is excellent; in SaaS, it's below average.
Compare against direct competitors of similar size. This reveals relative strengths and weaknesses.
Never rely on a single ratio. High ROE with high debt-to-equity may indicate risky leverage, not efficiency.
Four ratio categories: Liquidity (can we pay?), Profitability (are we making enough?), Efficiency (are we using resources well?), Leverage (how much debt?)
Always compare ratios over time (trend analysis) and against industry peers — a ratio in isolation means little
Current Ratio, Net Margin, Inventory Turnover, and Debt-to-Equity are the four most critical ratios for SMEs
High ROE is great, but check if it's driven by genuine profitability or excessive debt leverage
Automate ratio calculations — accounting software like Laabam.One generates these from your books automatically
You now understand all three financial statements and the ratios that bring them to life. Continue learning with Tax & Compliance or put your knowledge to work with Laabam.One.