Current Assets and Liabilities

Ninad RamdasiCategories: DSIJ_Magazine_Web, DSIJMagazine_App, Editorial, Letter to Editor, Letter to Editorjoin us on whatsappfollow us on googleprefered on google

Current Assets and Liabilities

The cover story in your latest issue on the relevance of value investing was simply bona fide.

The cover story in your latest issue on the relevance of value investing was simply bona fide. A particular criterion for stock selection using value investing principles was that current assets should be at least two times the current liabilities. Could you elucidate the same? -

- Parul Agarwal

Editor Responds: We appreciate your query and are pleased to hear that you found our cover story in the recent issue fruitful. Current assets are those assets of a company that are expected to be sold or used as a result of standard business operations over the next year. These include cash, cash equivalents, accounts receivable, inventory, marketable securities and other liquid assets. Current liabilities are a company’s short-term financial obligations that are due and expected to be settled within the next one year. These include accounts payable, short-term debt, dividend payable and tax payable and are typically settled using current assets. If a company has current assets at least two times its current liabilities, it illustrates that the company is highly capable of remaining solvent for a longer period and will rarely face problems to meet its short-term financial obligations. Hope this helps. Keep writing to us!