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Glossary

What is Debt-to-Equity Ratio? Definition & Analysis

Learn what debt-to-equity ratio means, how to calculate it, and how to use this leverage metric to assess a company's financial risk.

What is Debt-to-Equity Ratio?

The debt-to-equity ratio (D/E) measures a company’s financial leverage by comparing total debt to shareholders’ equity. It shows how much debt a company uses to finance its operations relative to shareholder investment.

Debt-to-Equity Formula

$$\text{D/E Ratio} = \frac{\text{Total Debt}}{\text{Shareholders’ Equity}}$$

Example Calculation

If a company has:

  • Total debt: $40 million
  • Shareholders’ equity: $100 million

D/E Ratio = $40M ÷ $100M = 0.4 (or 40%)

This means the company has $0.40 of debt for every $1.00 of equity.

Interpreting D/E Ratios

D/E Ratio Interpretation
Under 0.5 Conservative, low leverage
0.5 - 1.0 Moderate leverage
1.0 - 2.0 Higher leverage
Over 2.0 High leverage (potentially risky)

Note: “Normal” varies significantly by industry.

D/E by Industry

Industry Typical D/E
Utilities 1.0 - 2.0
REITs 0.5 - 1.5
Financials 2.0 - 10.0+
Technology 0.0 - 0.5
Healthcare 0.3 - 0.8
Retail 0.5 - 1.5
Airlines 1.0 - 3.0

Capital-intensive industries naturally carry more debt.

Types of Debt

Type Description
Short-term Debt Due within one year
Long-term Debt Due after one year
Bank Loans Traditional borrowing
Bonds Debt securities issued to investors
Leases Operating and finance leases

Net Debt-to-Equity

A more conservative measure subtracts cash:

$$\text{Net D/E} = \frac{\text{Total Debt} - \text{Cash}}{\text{Shareholders’ Equity}}$$

Example

  • Total debt: $40M
  • Cash: $15M
  • Equity: $100M

Net D/E = ($40M - $15M) ÷ $100M = 0.25

Why D/E Matters

1. Financial Risk

Higher leverage means more risk during downturns.

2. Interest Coverage

More debt = more interest payments, reducing net income.

3. Bankruptcy Risk

Companies with too much debt may struggle to meet obligations.

4. Financing Flexibility

Low D/E provides capacity to borrow for opportunities.

Real Company Examples

Company D/E Ratio
Apple 1.8
Microsoft 0.4
Alphabet 0.1
AT&T 1.1
Verizon 1.5

Advantages of Debt

  • Tax shield: Interest payments reduce taxable income
  • Lower cost: Debt typically costs less than equity
  • No dilution: Doesn’t reduce ownership for existing shareholders
  • Leverage returns: Can amplify ROE when used wisely

Risks of Too Much Debt

  • Interest burden: Fixed payments regardless of performance
  • Refinancing risk: Must repay or roll over maturing debt
  • Covenant restrictions: Limits on operations and dividends
  • Credit rating impact: Higher rates if leverage increases

D/E Trend Analysis

Watch for:

  • Rising D/E: Company taking on more debt (could be growth or concern)
  • Falling D/E: Deleveraging (paying down debt)
  • Stable D/E: Consistent capital structure
Metric Formula
Interest Coverage EBIT ÷ Interest Expense
Debt/EBITDA Total Debt ÷ EBITDA
Debt/Capital Debt ÷ (Debt + Equity)

Limitations

  1. Industry differences: Hard to compare across sectors
  2. Asset values: Book equity may not reflect market value
  3. Off-balance sheet: Some obligations aren’t counted as debt
  4. Cash position: Doesn’t directly account for cash reserves

This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.