Balance Sheet Analysis
How to analyse a UK balance sheet using financial ratios, trend analysis and common-size techniques to assess liquidity, solvency, asset efficiency and overall financial health.
Balance sheet analysis is the process of examining a company’s balance sheet to assess its financial position, liquidity, solvency and efficiency. The balance sheet shows what a business owns (assets), what it owes (liabilities) and the residual interest of the owners (equity) at a specific point in time.
While the profit and loss account tells you how a business has performed, the balance sheet tells you what it is worth and whether it can meet its obligations. Effective analysis combines ratio calculations with an understanding of the business context.
The Balance Sheet Structure
A UK balance sheet prepared under FRS 102 follows this standard layout:
| Section | £ |
|---|---|
| Fixed assets | |
| Tangible assets | 250,000 |
| Intangible assets | 40,000 |
| Investments | 15,000 |
| Total fixed assets | 305,000 |
| Current assets | |
| Stock | 65,000 |
| Debtors | 120,000 |
| Cash at bank and in hand | 30,000 |
| Total current assets | 215,000 |
| Creditors: amounts falling due within one year | (145,000) |
| Net current assets | 70,000 |
| Total assets less current liabilities | 375,000 |
| Creditors: amounts falling due after more than one year | (100,000) |
| Net assets | 275,000 |
| Capital and reserves | |
| Called-up share capital | 10,000 |
| Profit and loss reserve | 265,000 |
| Total equity | 275,000 |
Liquidity Analysis
Liquidity measures whether the business can pay its short-term debts as they fall due.
Current Ratio
Current ratio = Current assets / Current liabilities
Using the figures above: £215,000 / £145,000 = 1.48
| Current ratio | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Above 2.0 | Strong liquidity, but may indicate inefficient use of assets |
| 1.5 to 2.0 | Generally healthy |
| 1.0 to 1.5 | Adequate but warrants monitoring |
| Below 1.0 | Potential liquidity concern |
Quick Ratio (Acid Test)
Quick ratio = (Current assets - Stock) / Current liabilities
(£215,000 - £65,000) / £145,000 = 1.03
The quick ratio strips out stock because it may not be quickly convertible to cash. A quick ratio above 1.0 means the business can meet its short-term obligations without relying on selling stock.
Solvency Analysis
Solvency measures whether the business can meet its long-term obligations and continue operating over time.
Gearing Ratio
Gearing ratio = Total debt / (Total debt + Equity) x 100
£100,000 / (£100,000 + £275,000) x 100 = 26.7%
| Gearing level | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Below 25% | Low gearing, conservative financing |
| 25% to 50% | Moderate gearing |
| Above 50% | Highly geared, higher financial risk |
Debt-to-Equity Ratio
Debt-to-equity = Total debt / Equity
£100,000 / £275,000 = 0.36
A ratio below 1.0 means the business has more equity than debt. Higher ratios indicate greater reliance on borrowed funds and higher financial risk.
Interest Cover
Interest cover = Operating profit / Interest payable
This ratio measures how many times the business can pay its interest charges from operating profit. A ratio below 2.0 is generally considered a warning sign.
Efficiency Analysis
Efficiency ratios measure how well the business uses its assets to generate revenue. These ratios connect the balance sheet to the income statement.
Asset Turnover
Asset turnover = Turnover / Total assets
If turnover is £800,000 and total assets are £520,000: 1.54 times
This means every £1 of assets generates £1.54 of revenue. Higher is generally better, though capital-intensive industries will naturally have lower ratios.
Stock Days
Stock days = (Stock / Cost of sales) x 365
(£65,000 / £480,000) x 365 = 49 days
Debtor Days
Debtor days = (Trade debtors / Turnover) x 365
(£120,000 / £800,000) x 365 = 55 days
Creditor Days
Creditor days = (Trade creditors / Cost of sales) x 365
(£90,000 / £480,000) x 365 = 68 days
| Ratio | Value | What it tells you |
|---|---|---|
| Stock days | 49 | Stock sits for 49 days before being sold |
| Debtor days | 55 | Customers take 55 days to pay |
| Creditor days | 68 | The business takes 68 days to pay suppliers |
Trend Analysis
Comparing balance sheet figures across multiple periods reveals whether the business is improving or deteriorating:
| Item | Year 1 (£) | Year 2 (£) | Year 3 (£) | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net assets | 200,000 | 240,000 | 275,000 | Growing |
| Current ratio | 1.8 | 1.6 | 1.48 | Declining |
| Gearing | 20% | 23% | 26.7% | Rising |
| Debtor days | 42 | 48 | 55 | Worsening |
The net assets are growing, but liquidity is falling and customers are taking longer to pay. This combination may indicate that profit growth is coming at the expense of financial resilience.
Common-Size Analysis
Expressing each balance sheet item as a percentage of total assets allows comparison across businesses of different sizes:
| Item | Amount (£) | % of Total Assets |
|---|---|---|
| Tangible fixed assets | 250,000 | 48.1% |
| Intangible assets | 40,000 | 7.7% |
| Investments | 15,000 | 2.9% |
| Stock | 65,000 | 12.5% |
| Debtors | 120,000 | 23.1% |
| Cash | 30,000 | 5.8% |
| Total assets | 520,000 | 100% |
A business with 48% of its assets in tangible fixed assets is capital-intensive. One with 70% in debtors and stock is working-capital-intensive. The asset mix should be consistent with the industry and business model.
Key Warning Signs
When analysing a balance sheet, watch for these red flags:
| Warning sign | What it may indicate |
|---|---|
| Current ratio below 1.0 | Cannot meet short-term debts from current assets |
| Rapidly rising debtors | Customers paying more slowly, or revenue recognised prematurely |
| Growing stock levels without matching sales growth | Obsolete or slow-moving inventory |
| Net liabilities (negative equity) | Accumulated losses exceed share capital and reserves |
| Large intangible assets relative to total assets | May be difficult to realise in a distress scenario |
| Significant off-balance-sheet commitments | Operating leases, guarantees or contingent liabilities not on the face of the balance sheet |
Limitations of Balance Sheet Analysis
The balance sheet has inherent limitations that analysts must consider:
- It is a snapshot at a single date and may not reflect typical conditions
- Historical cost accounting means assets may be worth more or less than their book value
- Intangible value such as brand reputation, customer relationships and skilled employees does not appear on the balance sheet
- Window dressing can temporarily improve the balance sheet around the reporting date
- Different accounting policies between companies can make direct comparison difficult
For a comprehensive assessment, balance sheet analysis should be combined with financial ratio analysis across the full set of financial statements, including the profit and loss account and cash flow statement.