1.90 - 2.15
0.48 - 2.54
9.88M / 3.06M (Avg.)
-0.59 | -3.40
Highlights the firm's ability to meet near-term obligations and cover interest expenses. For conservative value investors, strong liquidity and coverage metrics are critical to avoid distress or forced dilution.
2.87
2–3 – Solid buffer. Benjamin Graham might see this as prudent management of working capital.
1.99
1.5–2.0 – Good coverage. Seth Klarman might check if seasonal factors affect the ratio significantly.
1.48
1.0–1.5 – Enough cash to cover all current liabilities. Seth Klarman would check if the business routinely hoards cash or invests it.
15.56
Interest coverage above 15 – Exceptional. Warren Buffett would see little near-term default risk unless earnings collapse.
-0.24
Negative short-term coverage ratio usually means negative OCF or an outsized near-term debt – a major Graham red flag.