Current Ratio
What is Current Ratio
The Current Ratio, calculated as Current Assets divided by Current Liabilities, is a metric used to assess a company's ability to pay its short-term debts using its short-term assets. It provides insight into a company's liquidity position, helping investors understand whether the company has sufficient current assets to cover its current liabilities.
The Current Ratio measures a company's ability to pay its short-term debts using its short-term assets. It is constructed by dividing Current Assets by Current Liabilities. A higher Current Ratio generally indicates that a company has a greater ability to meet its short-term obligations, while a lower ratio may signal potential liquidity issues. This metric provides insight into a company's financial health and its capacity to manage its working capital.
How to calculate it
Formula
Current Ratio = Current Assets / Current Liabilities
Example
Example frame: Current Ratio rises when the numerator increases relative to the denominator, and falls when the denominator improves relative to the numerator. Open the live stock page.
Benchmarks
The Current Ratio varies by sector or business model because different industries have distinct operating cycles and capital requirements, making it essential to compare a company's ratio to sector medians and the live S&P 500 benchmark to gauge its relative liquidity. By considering these benchmarks, investors can better assess a company's ability to meet its short-term obligations.
Sector comparison
| Sector | Median Current Ratio | As of |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 | 1.18 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Basic Materials | 1.96 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Technology | 1.46 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Healthcare | 1.42 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Industrials | 1.25 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Communication Services | 1.19 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Consumer Cyclical | 1.15 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Energy | 1.13 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Consumer Defensive | 1 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Financial Services | 1 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Utilities | 0.77 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Real Estate | 0.49 | Jul 9, 2026 |
Universe distribution
Chart view is trimmed to the 5th-95th percentile for readability.
Interpretation
How to read it
- Check whether current assets exceed current liabilities by a comfortable margin, since a ratio below one signals the company may struggle to pay short-term obligations with liquid resources.
- Watch for year-end spikes driven by temporary cash raises or deferred payables, which inflate the ratio artificially and obscure the company's typical operating liquidity position.
- Examine the composition of current assets, because a ratio that looks healthy may hide illiquid inventory or receivables that cannot convert to cash quickly enough to meet due dates.
- Compare the ratio across quarters rather than relying on a single snapshot, since seasonal businesses and working capital cycles create timing distortions that a one-period reading cannot reveal.
High vs low
A high current ratio indicates the company holds substantial liquid assets relative to near-term obligations, reducing immediate default risk. However, an excessively high ratio may signal inefficient capital deployment, such as excess cash sitting idle rather than funding growth or returning value to shareholders. A low current ratio raises liquidity concerns, suggesting the company may struggle to cover short-term debts without asset sales or refinancing. Yet a deliberately lean ratio can reflect efficient working capital management, particularly in businesses with predictable cash inflows. To resolve these interpretations, examine the company's cash conversion cycle, industry norms, and whether changes in the ratio stem from operational improvements or deteriorating collections. Cross-reference with the quick ratio to assess whether inventory inflates the current ratio artificially, and review cash flow statements to confirm whether reported current assets will actually convert to cash.
Reference
Extremes
- Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. (IBKR)Financial Services16,927.9Current Ratio
- Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (CFG)Financial Services228.3Current Ratio
- MetLife, Inc. (MET)Financial Services85.01Current Ratio
- The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (GS)Financial Services0.02Current Ratio
- Equity Residential (EQR)Real Estate0.03Current Ratio
- Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. (MAA)Real Estate0.05Current Ratio
| Group | Company | Ticker | Sector | Current Ratio | As of |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Highest | Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. | IBKR | Financial Services | 16,927.9 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Highest | Citizens Financial Group, Inc. | CFG | Financial Services | 228.3 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Highest | MetLife, Inc. | MET | Financial Services | 85.01 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Lowest | The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | GS | Financial Services | 0.02 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Lowest | Equity Residential | EQR | Real Estate | 0.03 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Lowest | Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. | MAA | Real Estate | 0.05 | Jul 9, 2026 |
Limitations
While the Current Ratio provides insight into a company's liquidity, there are several limitations to consider when interpreting this metric.
- The current ratio does not distinguish between the quality or liquidity of individual current assets, treating cash equivalently to slow-moving inventory despite their different conversion speeds.
- A high current ratio may indicate inefficient asset management or excess idle cash rather than financial strength, as companies tie up capital that could be deployed productively.
- The metric is a snapshot at a single reporting date and can be artificially inflated through year-end timing decisions, such as accelerating cash collection or delaying payables before the measurement date.
- Industry norms vary significantly, making cross-sector comparisons unreliable since capital-intensive industries and service businesses operate with structurally different current asset and liability profiles.
Related concepts
FAQ
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