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Investing Lesson 3
Analyzing a Balance Sheet - Part 17
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Lesson 3 Main
How to Get Copies
What is it?
Typical Balance Sheet
Current Assets
Receivables
Receivable Turns
Inventory
Inventory Turns
Inventory Example
Prepaid Expenses
Current Liabilities
Working Capital
WC Per Dollar of Sales
Negative Work. Cap
Current Ratio
Quick Ratio
Long Term Investment
Property, Plant, Equip.
Intangible Assets
Goodwill
Deferred Charges
Debt, Debt to Equity
Other Liabilities
Minority Interest
Shareholder Equity
Book Value
Com. & Pref. Shares
Cap. Surplus, Reserve
Treasury Stock
Retained Earnings
Formula & Calculations
Putting it all Together
Segment 2
Related Resources
Investing Lesson 1
Investing Lesson 2
Investing Lesson 3
More Lessons

Quick Test Ratio

The Quick Test Ratio (also called the Acid Test or Liquidity Ratio) is the most excessive and difficult test of a company's financial strength and liquidity. To calculate the quick ratio, take the current assets and subtract the inventory (current assets minus inventory is often referred to as the "quick assets"). What you are left with are the items that can be converted into cash immediately . Divide the result by the current liabilities. The answer is the Quick Test ratio.

What does this tell you? It is a reflection of the liquidity of a business. The Quick Test ratio does not apply to the handful of companies where inventory is almost immediately convertible into cash (such as McDonalds, Wal-Mart, etc.) Instead, it measures the ability of the average company to come up with cold, hard cash literally in a matter of hours or days. Since inventory is rarely sold that fast in most businesses, it is excluded.

Next page > What are Long Term Investments on the Balance Sheet? > << back 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 more >>

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