Enter a stock symbol to view key financial ratios displayed as analog gauges
Measures a company's ability to pay short-term obligations
Measures a company's ability to pay short-term obligations. Higher is better, with 2.0 considered good.
A more stringent measure of liquidity that excludes inventory. A ratio of 1.0 or higher is generally good.
Measures a company's ability to cover short-term liabilities with cash and cash equivalents. Above 0.5 is typically good.
Measures a company's ability to meet long-term obligations
Measures financial leverage. Lower is generally better, with industry averages typically between 1.0 and 2.0.
Shows the percentage of assets financed by debt. Lower ratios indicate less financial risk.
Measures how easily a company can pay interest on outstanding debt. Higher is better, with 2.0 as minimum safe level.
Measures a company's ability to generate earnings relative to sales, assets, and equity
Percentage of revenue retained after cost of goods sold. Higher margins indicate better efficiency.
Percentage of revenue that translates into profit. Higher margins indicate better profitability.
Measures how efficiently a company uses its assets to generate profit. Higher is better.
Measures how efficiently a company uses equity to generate profit. Higher is better, typically 15-20% is considered good.
Measures how efficiently a company uses all capital to generate profit. Should exceed cost of capital.
Measures how efficiently a company uses its assets and manages its liabilities
Measures how efficiently a company uses its assets to generate sales. Higher is better.
Measures how many times inventory is sold and replaced in a period. Higher is generally better.
Average number of days to sell inventory. Lower is better, indicating faster inventory turnover.
Measures how efficiently a company collects revenue. Higher is better.
Measures the relative value of a company's shares
Compares share price to earnings per share. Lower may indicate undervaluation, but varies by industry.
Compares share price to book value per share. Lower may indicate undervaluation.
Enterprise Value to EBITDA. Lower values may indicate undervaluation.
Annual dividend payment as percentage of share price. Higher yields provide more income.
Measures a company's ability to service its debt and meet financial obligations
Measures ability to pay interest expenses. Higher is better, with 2.5+ considered good.
Measures ability to service all debt payments. Above 1.25 is typically considered good.
Measures ability to cover fixed charges like lease payments. Above 1.5 is typically good.