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What is Current Ratio and Why It Matters for Investors – Part 2 

What is Current Ratio and Why It Matters for Investors – Part 2 

In Part 1 of this series, we used the debt to equity ratio to identify financially strong, low-debt companies. However, a company can have manageable long-term debt and still face a serious short-term crisis if it does not have enough liquid assets to pay its immediate bills

That is exactly what the current ratio is designed to reveal

The current ratio is the second checkpoint in Smart Disha’s Balance Sheet Checklist and it is one of the most important liquidity metrics every Indian investor must understand. Moreover, even legendary investor Warren Buffett does not invest in companies with a current ratio below 1.5 because a company that cannot pay its short-term obligations is a company that can collapse quickly regardless of how profitable it appears on paper

In this article, which is Part 2 of our 5-part Balance Sheet Series, we explain what the current ratio means for investors, why it should be above 1.5, and how to use it to evaluate the short-term financial health of any Indian company

What is Current Ratio in Stocks?

The current ratio measures a company’s ability to pay its short-term liabilities using its short-term assets. In other words, it tells you whether a company has enough liquid resources to cover all the bills and obligations that are due within the next 12 months

Formula

Current Ratio = Current Assets / Current Liabilities

Here is a simple example:

  • Current Assets (cash, inventory, receivables): Rs. 150 crore
  • Current Liabilities (payables, short-term debt): Rs. 80 crore
  • Therefore, Current Ratio = 1.875

This means the company has Rs. 1.87 of liquid assets for every Rs. 1 it owes in the short term. Consequently, it is in a comfortable position to meet all its immediate financial obligations without stress

What Does the Current Ratio Tell Investors?

The current ratio directly answers one of the most important risk questions in investing: can this company survive a short-term financial shock?

Think of it this way. Even the most profitable company in the world can face a liquidity crisis if its cash gets tied up in inventory or receivables while its bills keep coming due. Furthermore, during economic slowdowns, revenue can drop suddenly while short-term obligations remain fixed. Consequently, a company with a weak current ratio can face default even if its long-term fundamentals are strong

This is precisely why the current ratio matters so much for investors. It acts as an early warning system that tells you whether the company is financially comfortable in the short term or walking a financial tightrope

Why Smart Disha Uses 1.5 as the Benchmark

At Smart Disha Academy, our balance sheet checklist requires a current ratio above 1.5 as the minimum standard. Here is the logic behind this number

First, a current ratio above 1.5 means the company has at least Rs. 1.50 of liquid assets for every Rs. 1 of short-term debt. Therefore, even if some assets take time to convert to cash or some receivables face delays, the company still has a comfortable buffer to meet its obligations

Second, Warren Buffett himself uses 1.5 as the minimum threshold when evaluating companies. Moreover, research consistently shows that companies with current ratios below 1.0 face significantly higher default risk during economic downturns. As a result, 1.5 strikes the ideal balance between liquidity safety and operational efficiency

Third, a current ratio that is too high, above 3.0 or 4.0, can actually be a warning sign of a different kind. It may mean the company is hoarding excessive cash or carrying too much unsold inventory. Consequently, management may not be deploying capital efficiently. Therefore, the ideal range is between 1.5 and 3.0 for most Indian companies

Current Ratio by Sector – Indian Market Reference

Just like all balance sheet metrics, the ideal current ratio varies across industries. Therefore, always compare within the same sector.

SectorTypical Current RatioNotes
IT / Software Services2.0 to 4.0Asset-light, very high liquidity
FMCG (Branded)1.0 to 2.0Fast inventory turnover keeps ratio lower
Pharmaceuticals1.5 to 3.0Strong liquidity typical
Specialty Chemicals1.5 to 2.5Moderate working capital needs
Auto and Manufacturing1.0 to 2.0Higher inventory needs
Retail / Trading0.8 to 1.5Fast-moving stock, lower ratio acceptable
Infrastructure1.0 to 1.8Project-based, liquidity varies

Key Insight: Retail companies naturally operate with lower current ratios because their inventory turns over very quickly. Therefore, a ratio of 1.2 for a retailer like DMart is not alarming. However, the same ratio in a manufacturing company would be a red flag

Real Indian Stock Examples – Current Ratio in Stocks

Infosys – Current Ratio of 2.5 to 3.0 Infosys consistently maintains a strong current ratio above 2.5. Moreover, the company holds significant cash and liquid investments on its balance sheet, giving it exceptional short-term financial strength. As a result, it can comfortably handle any sudden revenue slowdown or economic uncertainty without liquidity stress

Sun Pharmaceutical – Current Ratio of 2.0 to 2.5 Sun Pharma maintains a healthy current ratio reflecting its strong receivables collection and well-managed inventory. Furthermore, this liquidity strength gives the company flexibility to invest in R&D and acquisitions without needing to borrow short-term funds

Highly Leveraged Companies – Current Ratio below 1.0 Several infrastructure and real estate companies in India have historically operated with current ratios below 1.0. Consequently, these companies rely on continuous refinancing and new project revenues to meet their short-term obligations. As a result, any disruption in cash flows or credit markets can create a severe liquidity crisis very quickly

Smart Disha Insight: The current ratio works best when combined with the debt to equity ratio from Part 1. A company with low debt AND a current ratio above 1.5 has a genuinely strong balance sheet that can withstand both short-term and long-term financial pressures

Current Ratio vs Quick Ratio – What is the Difference?

Many investors confuse the current ratio with the quick ratio. However, they measure slightly different things

The current ratio includes all current assets, including inventory. However, inventory is not always easy to convert to cash quickly. Therefore, the quick ratio removes inventory from the calculation and gives a stricter view of immediate liquidity

Quick Ratio = (Current Assets – Inventory) / Current Liabilities

For most investors, the current ratio is sufficient as a first filter. However, for manufacturing or retail companies where inventory forms a large part of current assets, always check the quick ratio as well for a more accurate picture

How to Find Current Ratio in Stocks

  1. Go to Screener.in or Tickertape.in
  2. Search for the company and open the Financials or Ratios tab
  3. Find Current Ratio under liquidity ratios
  4. Check the 5-year trend because a declining current ratio is an early warning signal
  5. Compare with industry peers for meaningful context

FAQs

Q1. What is a good current ratio for Indian stocks? 

A current ratio between 1.5 and 3.0 is generally considered healthy for most Indian companies. Furthermore, Warren Buffett uses 1.5 as his minimum threshold before investing in any company. However, the ideal level varies by industry. Therefore, always compare within the same sector for a meaningful evaluation

Q2. What does a current ratio below 1.0 mean? 

A current ratio below 1.0 means the company has more short-term obligations than short-term assets. Consequently, it may struggle to pay its bills without borrowing more money or selling long-term assets. This is a serious liquidity red flag that requires immediate investigation before investing

Q3. Is a very high current ratio always good? 

Not necessarily. A current ratio above 3.0 or 4.0 can indicate the company is holding excessive cash or unsold inventory rather than deploying capital productively. Furthermore, this may signal poor management of working capital. Therefore, the ideal range is between 1.5 and 3.0 for most sectors

Q4. What is the difference between current ratio and quick ratio? 

The current ratio includes all current assets, including inventory. The quick ratio, on the other hand, excludes inventory and measures only the most liquid assets such as cash and receivables. Therefore, the quick ratio is a stricter and more conservative test of short-term liquidity. For manufacturing and retail companies with large inventory, always check both ratios together

Q5. What does a declining current ratio over 5 years mean? 

A consistently declining current ratio is a warning signal that the company’s short-term financial position is weakening over time. It may mean the company is taking on more short-term debt, collecting receivables more slowly, or struggling to manage its working capital efficiently. Furthermore, if the ratio drops below 1.5, it deserves serious scrutiny before making any investment decision

Conclusion

The current ratio above 1.5 is the second essential test of balance sheet strength. Moreover, it tells you something the debt to equity ratio from Part 1 cannot: whether the company has enough short-term liquidity to survive unexpected financial shocks and economic slowdowns

A company that passes both the debt to equity test and the current ratio test has demonstrated that it is financially strong on both a short-term and long-term basis. However, there is still one more layer of balance sheet strength to confirm. Furthermore, true financial strength goes beyond ratios and ultimately comes down to one simple question: does the company have more cash than debt?

That is exactly what we examine next. Continue with Part 3: How to Find Cash-Rich Companies in the Indian Stock Market to add the final liquidity layer to your balance sheet analysis

Missed Part 1? Read Debt to Equity Ratio: How to Spot Debt-Free Companies first

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