Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Gearing Ratio


Gearing Ratio


Gearing ratio
Gearing focuses on the capital structure of the business – that means the proportion of finance that is provided by debt relative to the finance provided by equity (or shareholders).
The gearing ratio is also concerned with liquidity.  However, it focuses on the long-term financial stability of a business.
Gearing (otherwise known as "leverage") measures the proportion of assets invested in a business that are financed by long-term borrowing

In theory, the higher the level of borrowing (gearing) the higher are the risks to a business, since the payment of interest and repayment of debts are not "optional" in the same way as dividends. However, gearing can be a financially sound part of a business's capital structure particularly if the business has strong, predictable cash flows.
The formula for calculating gearing is:



Long-term liabilities include loans due more than one year + preference shares + mortgages
Capital employed = Share capital + retained earnings + long-term liabilities


The gearing calculation can be calculated like this:
2012
£’000
2011
£’000
Long-term liabilities
1,200
1,450
Capital employed
5,655
4,675
Gearing ratio
21.2%
31.0%

According to the data the gearing ratio at 31 December 2012 was 21.2%, a reduction from 31.0% a year earlier.  This was largely because the business reduced long-term borrowings by £200,000 and added over £1million to retained earnings. 
How can the gearing ratio be evaluated?
  • A business with a gearing ratio of more than 50% is traditionally said to be “highly geared”.
  • A business with gearing of less than 25% is traditionally described as having “low gearing”
  • Something between 25% - 50% would be considered normal for a well-established business which is happy to finance its activities using debt.
For the above business, that would suggest that the business is relatively lowly-geared and that the capital structure of the business is pretty safe and cautious.
It is important to remember that financing a business through long-term debt is not necessarily a bad thing!  Long-term debt is normally cheap, and it reduces the amount that shareholders have to invest in the business.
What is a sensible level of gearing?  Much depends on the ability of the business to grow profits and generate positive cash flow to service the debt.  A mature business which produces strong and reliable cash flows can handle a much higher level of gearing than a business where the cash flows are unpredictable and uncertain.

Another important point to remember is that the long-term capital structure of the business is very much in the control of the shareholders and management.  Steps can be taken to change or manage the level of gearing – for example:

Reduce GearingIncrease Gearing
Focus on profit improvement (e.g. cost minimisationFocus on growth – invest in revenue growth rather than profit
Repay long-term loansConvert short-term debt into long-term loans
Retain profits rather than pay dividendsBuy-back ordinary shares
Issue more sharesPay increased dividends out of retained earnings
Convert loans into equityIssue preference shares or debentures




No comments: