Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR)

Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR)

Table of Contents What Is Sustainable Growth Rate? Formula and Calculation of the SGR What the SGR Can Tell You When Growth Exceeds the SGR The Difference Between the SGR and the PEG Ratio Limitations of the SGR The sustainable growth rate (SGR) is the maximum rate of growth that a company or social enterprise can sustain without having to finance growth with additional equity or debt. You would calculate its SGR as follows: ROE:  0.15 × ( 1 − 0.40  Dividend Payout Ratio ) SGR:  0.09  Or  9 % \\begin{aligned} &\\text{ROE: } 0.15 \\times (1 - 0.40 \\text{ Dividend Payout Ratio})\\\\ &\\text{SGR: } 0.09 \\text{ Or }9\\% \\end{aligned} ROE: 0.15×(1−0.40 Dividend Payout Ratio)SGR: 0.09 Or 9% The result above means that the company can safely grow at a rate of 9% using its current resources and revenue without incurring additional debt or issuing equity to fund growth. The sustainable growth rate (SGR) is the maximum rate of growth that a company can sustain without having to finance growth with additional equity or debt. The SGR involves the growth rate of a company without taking into account the company's stock price while the PEG ratio calculates growth as it relates to the stock price.

The sustainable growth rate (SGR) is the maximum rate of growth that a company can sustain without having to finance growth with additional equity or debt.

What Is the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR)?

The sustainable growth rate (SGR) is the maximum rate of growth that a company or social enterprise can sustain without having to finance growth with additional equity or debt. The SGR involves maximizing sales and revenue growth without increasing financial leverage. Achieving the SGR can help a company prevent being over-leveraged and avoid financial distress.

The sustainable growth rate (SGR) is the maximum rate of growth that a company can sustain without having to finance growth with additional equity or debt.
Companies with high SGRs are usually effective in maximizing their sales efforts, focusing on high-margin products, and managing inventory, accounts payable, and accounts receivable.
Sustaining a high SGR in the long-term can prove difficult for companies for several reasons, including competition entering the market, changes in economic conditions, and the need to increase research and development.

Formula and Calculation of the SGR

SGR = Return on Equity × ( 1 − Dividend Payout Ratio ) \text{SGR}=\text{Return on Equity}\times(1-\text{Dividend Payout Ratio}) SGR=Return on Equity×(1−Dividend Payout Ratio)

First, obtain or calculate the return on equity (ROE) of the company. ROE measures the profitability of a company by comparing net income to the company's shareholders' equity.

Then, subtract the company's dividend payout ratio from 1. The dividend payout ratio is the percentage of earnings per share paid to shareholders as dividends. Finally, multiply the difference by the ROE of the company.

What the SGR Can Tell You

For a company to operate above its SGR, it would need to maximize sales efforts and focus on high-margin products and services. Also, inventory management is important and management must have an understanding of the ongoing inventory needed to match and sustain the company's sales level.

The SGR of a company can help identify whether it's managing day-to-day operations properly, including paying its bills and getting paid on time. Managing accounts payable needs to be managed in a timely manner to keep cash flow running smoothly.

Managing Accounts Receivable

Managing the collection of accounts receivable is also critical to maintaining cash flow and profit margins. Accounts receivable represents money owed by customers to the company. The longer it takes a company to collect its receivables contributes to a higher likelihood that it might have cash flow shortfalls and struggle to fund its operations properly. As a result, the company would need to incur additional debt or equity to make up for this cash flow shortfall. Companies with low SGR might not be managing their payables and receivables effectively.

The Unsustainability of High SGRs

The SGR calculation assumes that a company wants to maintain a target capital structure of debt and equity, maintain a static dividend payout ratio, and accelerate sales as quickly as the organization allows.

There are cases when a company's growth becomes greater than what it can self-fund. In these cases, the firm must devise a financial strategy that raises the capital needed to fund its rapid growth. The company can issue equity, increase financial leverage through debt, reduce dividend payouts, or increase profit margins by maximizing the efficiency of its revenue. All of these factors can increase the company's SGR.

The Difference Between the SGR and the PEG Ratio

The price-to-earnings-growth ratio (PEG ratio) is a stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio divided by the growth rate of its earnings for a specified time period. The PEG ratio is used to determine a stock's value while taking the company's earnings growth into account. The PEG ratio is said to provide a more complete picture than the P/E ratio.

The SGR involves the growth rate of a company without taking into account the company's stock price while the PEG ratio calculates growth as it relates to the stock price. As a result, the SGR is a metric that evaluates the viability of growth as it relates to its debt and equity. The PEG ratio is a valuation metric used to determine if the stock price is undervalued or overvalued.

Limitations of Using the SGR

Achieving the SGR is every company's goal, but some headwinds can stop a business from growing and achieving its SGR.

Consumer trends and economic conditions can help a business achieve its sustainable growth or cause the firm to miss it completely. Consumers with less disposable income are traditionally more conservative with spending, making them discriminating buyers. Companies compete for the business of these customers by slashing prices and potentially hindering growth. Companies also invest money into new product development to try to maintain existing customers and grow market share, which can cut into a company's ability to grow and achieve its SGR.

A company's forecasting and business planning can detract from its ability to achieve sustainable growth in the long-term. Companies sometimes confuse their growth strategy with growth capability and miscalculate their optimal SGR. If long-term planning is poor, a company might achieve high growth in the short-term but won't sustain it in the long-term.

In the long-term, companies need to reinvest in themselves through the purchase of fixed assets, which are property, plant, and equipment (PP&E). As a result, the company may need financing to fund its long-term growth through investment.

Capital-intensive industries like oil and gas need to use a combination of debt and equity financing in order to keep operating since their equipment such as oil drilling machines and oil rigs are so expensive.

It's important to compare a company's SGR with similar companies in its industry to achieve a fair comparison and meaningful benchmark.

Example of How to Use SGR

Suppose a company has an ROE of 15% and a dividend payout ratio of 40%. You would calculate its SGR as follows:

ROE:  0.15 × ( 1 − 0.40  Dividend Payout Ratio ) SGR:  0.09  Or  9 % \begin{aligned} &\text{ROE: } 0.15 \times (1 - 0.40 \text{ Dividend Payout Ratio})\\ &\text{SGR: } 0.09 \text{ Or }9\% \end{aligned} ROE: 0.15×(1−0.40 Dividend Payout Ratio)SGR: 0.09 Or 9%

The result above means that the company can safely grow at a rate of 9% using its current resources and revenue without incurring additional debt or issuing equity to fund growth.

If the company wants to accelerate its growth past the 9% threshold to, say, 12%, the company would likely need additional financing. The sustainable growth rate assumes that the company's sales revenue, expenses, payables, and receivables are all being managed to maximize effectiveness and efficiency.

Consider the retail giant Walmart (WMT); here are its financial details as Aug. 19, 2020:

Based on the SGR formula results, the company can grow at a sustainable rate of 12.7% without having to issue additional equity or take on additional debt.

Related terms:

Accounts Payable (AP)

"Accounts payable" (AP) refers to an account within the general ledger representing a company's obligation to pay off a short-term debt to its creditors or suppliers. read more

Accounts Receivable (AR) & Example

Accounts receivable is the balance of money due to a firm for goods or services delivered or used but not yet paid for by customers. read more

Business Valuation , Methods, & Examples

Business valuation is the process of estimating the value of a business or company. read more

Capital Structure

Capital structure is the particular combination of debt and equity used by a company to funds its ongoing operations and continue to grow. read more

Dividend Discount Model – DDM

The dividend discount model (DDM) is a system for evaluating a stock by using predicted dividends and discounting them back to present value. read more

Debt Ratio

The debt ratio is a fundamental analysis measure that looks at the extent of a company’s leverage. read more

Disposable Income

Disposable income is the amount of money that a person or household has to spend or save after income taxes are deducted.  read more

Dividend Payout Ratio

The dividend payout ratio is the measure of dividends paid out to shareholders relative to the company's net income. read more

Inventory Management

Inventory management is the process of ordering, storing and using a company's inventory: raw materials, components, and finished products. read more

Leverage : What Is Financial Leverage?

Leverage results from using borrowed capital as a source of funding when investing to expand a firm's asset base and generate returns on risk capital. read more

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