Gearing ratio
Gearing ratio measures the proportion of a firm financed by debt relative to equity or total capital, such as the debt-to-equity ratio. High gearing signals greater reliance on borrowing and higher financial risk.
FrameworkRatio analysis
See it move
A firm carries €70m of long-term debt alongside €130m of equity, for €200m of total capital. That gives a debt-to-equity ratio of 70/130 = 0.54, or 54%, and a debt-to-capital ratio of 70/200 = 0.35, or 35%. Whether that counts as high gearing depends on the industry — capital-intensive utilities typically run higher than this, technology firms lower.
The formula
Variables
- Total interest-bearing debt (€)
- Total equity (€)
Euros of debt per euro of equity; rises with each additional borrowing.
Variables
- Total interest-bearing debt (€)
- Total equity (€)
Proportion of total capital sourced from debt; bounded between 0 and 1.
Variables
- Earnings before interest and tax (€)
- Annual interest charge (€)
Number of times operating profit covers the interest charge; a higher ratio signals lower financial risk.
Check yourself
A firm has long-term debt of €45 million and total equity of €105 million. What is the firm's debt-to-capital gearing ratio, expressed as a percentage?