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§01 · EDITORIAL · GLOSSARY · INTEREST-COVERAGE-RATIO

Interest Coverage Ratio

The interest coverage ratio measures how many times a company's operating profit covers its interest payments. It is the cleanest pre-bankruptcy stress signal for a leveraged business. Formula: Interest Coverage = EBIT / Interest Expense. Some analys

Glossary

The interest coverage ratio measures how many times a company's operating profit covers its interest payments. It is the cleanest pre-bankruptcy stress signal for a leveraged business.

Formula: Interest Coverage = EBIT / Interest Expense. Some analysts use EBITDA in the numerator for a more cash-flow-friendly version.

Read the ratio as a margin of safety: a coverage of 5x means operating profit can fall 80% before interest payments cannot be met. Coverage of 1x means a single bad quarter triggers default risk. Investment-grade corporates typically have coverage above 5x; sub-3x raises ratings concerns; below 1.5x is distress territory.

For Indian listed companies, RBI's stressed-asset frameworks and rating agency triggers have used 2x or 1.5x as the threshold below which an account is flagged "weak".

Example 1: A telecom company reports EBIT of Rs 4,000 cr and interest expense of Rs 3,500 cr. Coverage = 1.14x. A 15% drop in EBIT pushes coverage below 1 and triggers covenant breach risk. This is the pre-2018 Vodafone-Idea pattern.

Example 2: A FMCG major reports EBIT of Rs 8,000 cr and interest of Rs 200 cr. Coverage = 40x. The company is essentially debt-free in cash-flow terms; rating is AAA.

Adjacent metrics: Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) extends interest coverage by including principal repayments — used heavily in infrastructure finance. Fixed Charge Coverage includes lease payments. For non-financial corporates, interest coverage is the standard headline.

Always test coverage at through-cycle EBIT, not peak EBIT. The 2008 and 2020 crises showed peak-cycle EBIT can collapse 50%+ in a year for industrials.

Disclaimer: Educational content from MintByte (ARN-314872, MFD). Examples are illustrative. SEBI Investment Adviser registration is in process; we do not recommend specific stocks.

Reviewed · January 2026

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Glossary definitions are written for Indian capital allocators first; where US convention differs, the entry calls that out explicitly. MintByte is an AMFI-registered mutual fund distributor (ARN-314872); SEBI Registered Investment Adviser and Research Analyst registrations are in process. Not investment advice.