The quick ratio, also called the acid-test ratio, is a stricter version of the current ratio. It excludes inventory and prepaid expenses from current assets because these may not convert to cash quickly enough to meet near-term obligations.
Formula: Quick Ratio = (Cash + Receivables + Short-term Investments) / Current Liabilities. Equivalently, (Current Assets − Inventory − Prepaid) / Current Liabilities.
A quick ratio of 1.0 or higher signals the company can meet its short-term liabilities from genuinely liquid assets without selling inventory at fire-sale prices. Below 1.0 indicates dependence on inventory turnover or refinancing to clear short-term dues.
The quick ratio is particularly important for retail, FMCG, real-estate, and manufacturing businesses where inventory can be a large share of current assets. For pure-services companies with negligible inventory, quick ratio approximately equals current ratio.
Example 1: A retailer reports current ratio of 1.8 but quick ratio of 0.4 — inventory dominates. If sales slow and inventory becomes harder to clear, the liquidity headline collapses. This pattern preceded several retail-distress cases historically.
Example 2: An IT services firm has current ratio 3.5 and quick ratio 3.4 — they are nearly identical because the company has minimal inventory. The quick ratio adds little additional insight; current ratio is sufficient.
Bank perspective: Lenders frequently use quick ratio to size working-capital facility limits. A low quick ratio combined with high debt-to-equity is a red flag for short-term refinancing risk.
Use both current and quick ratios in combination; neither alone tells the full liquidity story.
Disclaimer: Educational content from MintByte (ARN-314872, MFD). Examples are illustrative. SEBI Investment Adviser registration is in process; we do not recommend specific stocks.