In the balance sheet, the total liabilities exceed the total equity overwhelmingly. What does this mean?
There are 3 possible types of scenarios when this happens:
1. The company has excessive long term borrowings.
2. The company has excellent business that uses very little equity and its business is funded mainly by its creditors.
3. The low equity is due to accumulated deficit, the result from continuing losses in operations.
Let us look at scenario No. 1: The company has excessive long term borrowings.
Companies normally borrow money from financial institutions to fund their expansion.
There are 3 possible types of scenarios when this happens:
1. The company has excessive long term borrowings.
2. The company has excellent business that uses very little equity and its business is funded mainly by its creditors.
3. The low equity is due to accumulated deficit, the result from continuing losses in operations.
Let us look at scenario No. 1: The company has excessive long term borrowings.
Companies normally borrow money from financial institutions to fund their expansion.
- This is even more prevalent in an environment where the interest rates are low.
- Some companies will also refinance their debt by taking advantage of the low interest rate so that they can enjoy some savings in the interest payable.
- Yet others will refinance their debt with a higher interest rate to extend the maturity date of the debt.
All the above make business sense, when the return on capital is higher than the cost of capital.
But, if the business continues to suffer despite the injection of additional funds through borrowings, then the company could be in dire straits.
When are borrowings excessive? How do you determine this?
The key is in the payback period.
Look at the amount of long-term borrowings (normally found under the heading of Non-Current Liabilities) and then the Net Profit (found in the Income Statement).
Assuming that the company can utilise ALL its Net Profits in its present financial year to pay off its long term borrowings AND the SAME Net Profit recurs every year, you have this formula:
Payback Period in years = Long Term Borrowings /Net Profit.
The resulting answer is the payback period for the long-term borrowings.
A prudent KPI for the payback period is not more than 5 years.
Yes, you can argue that the company can achieve tremendous profit growth in the next few years. If that happens, the number of years required to pay off its debts can be reduced dramatically.
By the same argument, what if the economy suffers and a loss is incurred?