Solvency

Solvency

Solvency is the ability of a company to meet its long-term debts and financial obligations. 2:01 While solvency represents a company’s ability to meet all of its financial obligations, generally the sum of its liabilities, liquidity represents a company's ability to meet its short-term obligations. The quickest way to assess a company’s solvency is by checking its shareholders’ equity on the balance sheet, which is the sum of a company’s assets minus liabilities. The shareholders’ equity on a company’s balance sheet can be a quick way to check a company’s solvency and financial health. Other ratios that may be analyzed when considering solvency include: Debt to equity Debt to capital Debt to tangible net worth Total liabilities to equity Total assets to equity Debt to EBITDA

Solvency is the ability of a company to meet its long-term debts and other financial obligations.

What Is Solvency?

Solvency is the ability of a company to meet its long-term debts and financial obligations. Solvency can be an important measure of financial health, since its one way of demonstrating a company’s ability to manage its operations into the foreseeable future. The quickest way to assess a company’s solvency is by checking its shareholders’ equity on the balance sheet, which is the sum of a company’s assets minus liabilities.

Solvency is the ability of a company to meet its long-term debts and other financial obligations.
Solvency is one measure of a company’s financial health, since it demonstrates a company’s ability to manage operations into the foreseeable future.
Investors can use ratios to analyze a company's solvency.
When analyzing solvency, it is typically prudent to conjunctively assess liquidity measures as well, particularly since a company can be insolvent but still generate steady levels of liquidity.

How Solvency Works

Solvency portrays the ability of a business (or individual) to pay off its financial obligations. For this reason, the quickest assessment of a company’s solvency is its assets minus liabilities, which equal its shareholders’ equity. There are also solvency ratios, which can spotlight certain areas of solvency for deeper analysis.

Many companies have negative shareholders’ equity, which is a sign of insolvency. Negative shareholders’ equity insinuates that a company has no book value, and this could even lead to personal losses for small business owners if not protected by limited liability terms if a company must close. In essence, if a company was required to immediately close down, it would need to liquidate all of its assets and pay off all of its liabilities, leaving only the shareholders’ equity as a remaining value.

The shareholders’ equity on a company’s balance sheet can be a quick way to check a company’s solvency and financial health.

Carrying negative shareholders’ equity on the balance sheet is usually only common for newly developing private companies, startups, or recently offered public companies. As a company matures, its solvency position typically improves.

However, certain events may create an increased risk to solvency, even for well-established companies. In the case of business, the pending expiration of a patent can pose risks to solvency, as it will allow competitors to produce the product in question, and it results in a loss of associated royalty payments. Further, changes in certain regulations that directly impact a company’s ability to continue business operations can pose an additional risk. Both businesses and individuals may also experience solvency issues should a large judgment be ordered against them after a lawsuit.

When studying solvency, it is also important to be aware of certain measures used for managing liquidity. Solvency and liquidity are two different things, but it is often wise to analyze them together, particularly when a company is insolvent. A company can be insolvent and still produce regular cash flow as well as steady levels of working capital.

Special Considerations: Solvency Ratios

Assets minus liabilities is the quickest way to assess a company’s solvency. The solvency ratio calculates net income + depreciation and amortization / total liabilities. This ratio is commonly used first when building out a solvency analysis.

There are also other ratios that can help to more deeply analyze a company's solvency. The interest coverage ratio divides operating income by interest expense to show a company's ability to pay the interest on its debt. A higher interest coverage ratio indicates greater solvency. The debt-to-assets ratio divides a company's debt by the value of its assets to provide indications of capital structure and solvency health. 

Other ratios that may be analyzed when considering solvency include:

Solvency ratio levels vary by industry, so it is important to understand what constitutes a good ratio for the company before drawing conclusions from the ratio calculations. Ratios that suggest lower solvency than the industry average could raise a flag or suggest financial problems on the horizon.

Solvency vs. Liquidity

While solvency represents a company’s ability to meet all of its financial obligations, generally the sum of its liabilities, liquidity represents a company's ability to meet its short-term obligations. This is why it can be especially important to check a company’s liquidity levels if it has a negative book value.

One of the easiest and quickest ways to check on liquidity is by subtracting short-term assets minus short-term liabilities. This is also the calculation for working capital, which shows how much money a company has readily available to pay its upcoming bills.

Short-term assets and short-term liabilities are those that have a one-year time frame. For example, cash and equivalents is a common short-term asset. Short-term accounts payable is a common short-term liability.

A company can survive with insolvency for a reasonable time period, but a company cannot survive without liquidity. Some interesting ratios that can be helpful in more deeply assessing liquidity can include:

Related terms:

Accounting

Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more

Balance Sheet : Formula & Examples

A balance sheet is a financial statement that reports a company's assets, liabilities and shareholder equity at a specific point in time. read more

Book Value : Formula & Calculation

An asset's book value is equal to its carrying value on the balance sheet, and companies calculate it by netting the asset against its accumulated depreciation. read more

Cash Asset Ratio

The cash asset ratio is the current value of marketable securities and cash, divided by the company's current liabilities.  read more

Current Ratio

The current ratio is a liquidity ratio that measures a company's ability to cover its short-term obligations with its current assets. read more

Debt-to-Equity (D/E) Ratio & Formula

The debt-to-equity (D/E) ratio indicates how much debt a company is using to finance its assets relative to the value of shareholders’ equity. read more

Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR)

Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) is a requirement under Basel III whereby banks are required to hold enough high-quality liquid assets to fund cash outflows for 30 days. read more

Liquidity Ratio

Liquidity ratios are a class of financial metrics used to determine a debtor's ability to pay off current debt obligations without raising external capital. read more

Patent

A patent grants property rights to an inventor of a process, design, or invention for a set time in exchange for a comprehensive disclosure of the invention. read more

Shareholder Equity (SE)

Shareholder equity (SE) is the owner's claim after subtracting total liabilities from total assets. read more