Total Debt-to-Total Assets Ratio
Overview
The total debt-to-total assets ratio (also called the debt-to-assets ratio) is a leverage measure that shows what portion of a company’s assets is financed with debt. It helps investors and creditors assess financial risk and a firm’s reliance on borrowed funds versus owner (equity) financing.
Formula
TD/TA = (Short‑Term Debt + Long‑Term Debt) / Total Assets
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- Total debt generally includes all interest‑bearing obligations (short‑term and long‑term).
- Total assets includes all balance‑sheet assets, both tangible and intangible.
- The ratio is often expressed as a decimal (0.40) or a percentage (40%).
A value below 1.0 is typical. A ratio greater than 1.0 indicates liabilities exceed assets and suggests technical insolvency.
How to interpret it
- The ratio indicates degree of leverage:
- Lower ratio → more assets financed by equity; typically more financial flexibility.
- Higher ratio → more assets financed by debt; higher fixed obligations and greater risk in downturns.
- Example interpretation: a ratio of 0.40 means 40% of assets are financed with debt and 60% with equity.
- Creditors use it to decide whether to extend or price new loans; investors use it to evaluate risk relative to return expectations.
Practical example (illustrative)
- Company ABC: TD/TA ≈ 0.30 — comparatively low leverage; greater flexibility to borrow or absorb shocks.
- Company DEF: TD/TA ≈ 0.50 — roughly equal financing from debt and equity; moderate risk.
- Company XYZ: TD/TA ≈ 0.90 — high leverage; most assets are financed by debt and the company has limited flexibility.
Context matters: company size, industry norms and business lifecycle (startup vs. established firm) affect what level of debt is appropriate.
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What it can (and cannot) tell you
What it can tell you:
– Degree of leverage and reliance on debt financing.
– Trend in leverage when tracked over time (increasing or decreasing risk).
What it cannot tell you:
– Quality, liquidity or composition of assets (e.g., large intangible assets may not be easily converted to cash).
– Timing and terms of debt (interest rates, covenants, maturities).
– Whether the company can service its debt — pair with interest coverage and liquidity ratios for that view.
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Limitations and caveats
- Lumps all assets together — hides liquidity and recoverability differences.
- May understate risk when a company’s assets are largely illiquid or impaired.
- Industry averages vary widely; a “high” ratio in one sector may be normal in another (e.g., utilities vs. tech startups).
- Should always be evaluated alongside other ratios (debt‑to‑equity, current ratio, interest coverage) and compared to peers and historical trends.
What’s a “good” ratio?
There is no universal cutoff. A commonly cited comfortable range is roughly 0.30–0.60, but acceptability depends on:
– Industry norms
– Company size and business model
– Access to capital markets and earnings stability
How to use it effectively
- Compare to industry peers and sector averages.
- Track changes over multiple periods to detect rising or falling leverage.
- Combine with liquidity and coverage ratios to evaluate debt service capacity and short‑term risk.
- Review debt maturity schedule and asset composition for a fuller risk picture.
Key takeaways
- TD/TA = (Total Debt) / (Total Assets); measures the share of assets financed with debt.
- Higher ratios mean greater leverage and potentially higher financial risk.
- Interpret the ratio in context: industry norms, asset quality, debt terms, and trends over time matter.
- Use alongside other financial ratios to assess overall solvency and debt‑servicing ability.