Skip to content
Jarviix

Investing · 6 min read

How to Read a Balance Sheet: A Beginner's Guide for Investors

The balance sheet tells you what a company owns and owes at a moment in time — and reveals risks the income statement hides. A practical walkthrough of every section that matters.

By Jarviix Editorial · Apr 19, 2026

Financial spreadsheet on computer screen
Photo via Unsplash

The balance sheet is the most ignored of the three financial statements among retail investors. Income statements get attention because earnings drive headlines. Cash flow statements get attention from sophisticated investors. Balance sheets get a single glance, if any.

But the balance sheet is where most company-killing problems first appear: hidden debt, deteriorating asset quality, ballooning receivables, working capital strain. This guide is a practical walkthrough.

Balance sheet structure

Every balance sheet has three main sections:

Assets: What the company OWNS or controls.

  • Current assets (used within 1 year)
  • Non-current assets (long-term)

Liabilities: What the company OWES.

  • Current liabilities (due within 1 year)
  • Non-current liabilities (long-term)

Shareholder Equity: Owners' residual interest after debts.

  • Share capital
  • Reserves and surplus
  • Retained earnings

The fundamental equation: Assets = Liabilities + Shareholder Equity

If a company has ₹500 crore in assets and ₹200 crore in liabilities, shareholder equity = ₹300 crore.

Walking through each section

Current Assets

Assets the company expects to convert to cash within one year:

Cash and cash equivalents: bank balances, money market instruments. Higher is generally better but excessive cash (>20% of assets) might indicate inability to deploy capital productively.

Trade receivables (accounts receivable): money owed by customers for goods/services already delivered. Watch for:

  • Receivables growing faster than revenue (potentially deteriorating collections)
  • Aging receivables (longer outstanding = higher default risk)
  • Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) trend: rising = slower collections

Inventory: goods in production or finished but unsold. Watch for:

  • Inventory growing faster than revenue (potentially obsolete or overproduction)
  • Inventory days/turnover trend: rising days = slower-moving inventory
  • Industry context: FMCG inventory turns 8-12× a year; furniture might turn 3-4×

Other current assets: prepaid expenses, short-term loans given, advances paid to vendors.

Non-Current Assets

Property, Plant and Equipment (PPE): factories, machinery, buildings, vehicles. Shown at cost minus accumulated depreciation. Watch for:

  • Capital expenditure trends (new investments vs maintenance)
  • Asset age (very old assets may need replacement)
  • Capacity utilization vs PPE growth

Intangible assets: patents, trademarks, software, brand value. For acquired intangibles, valuation choices matter.

Goodwill: premium paid in acquisitions over fair value of net assets. Large goodwill = aggressive M&A history. Watch for impairments (write-downs of goodwill).

Investments: stakes in other companies, subsidiaries, mutual funds, bonds.

Deferred tax assets: future tax benefits from current losses or differences.

Current Liabilities

Trade payables (accounts payable): money owed to suppliers. Higher payables relative to inventory suggests the company is using supplier credit effectively (or is in trouble paying suppliers — context matters).

Short-term borrowings: bank loans, working capital loans, commercial paper due within a year.

Current portion of long-term debt: principal payments due within next year on long-term loans.

Other current liabilities: accrued expenses (salaries, taxes), deferred revenue.

Non-Current Liabilities

Long-term borrowings: term loans, bonds, debentures with > 1 year maturity. Critical to analyze:

  • Interest rate (fixed/floating)
  • Maturity schedule
  • Covenants (conditions imposed by lenders)
  • Currency mix (foreign currency debt = forex risk)

Provisions: for retirement benefits (gratuity, pension), warranty obligations, tax disputes.

Deferred tax liabilities: future tax obligations.

Shareholder Equity

Share capital: face value of shares issued. Total ₹X if 100 lakh shares of ₹10 face value = ₹10 crore.

Reserves and surplus:

  • General reserves: built from profits
  • Capital reserves: from share premium, asset sales, etc.
  • Retained earnings: accumulated profits not paid as dividends

Total equity = book value of the company. Per-share book value = total equity / shares outstanding.

Key ratios derived from balance sheet

Solvency ratios

Debt-to-Equity (D/E) = Total Debt / Shareholder Equity

  • D/E < 0.3: very conservative
  • D/E 0.3 - 1: moderate
  • D/E 1 - 2: leveraged but manageable for stable cash flows
  • D/E > 2: high leverage; sustainable only with strong cash flows

Debt-to-Assets = Total Debt / Total Assets

What % of assets is funded by debt. Lower is safer.

Interest Coverage Ratio = EBIT / Interest Expense

How many times current earnings cover interest payments.

  • 5×: comfortable

  • 3-5×: adequate
  • 1.5-3×: stress zone
  • < 1.5×: distress

Liquidity ratios

Current Ratio = Current Assets / Current Liabilities

  • 2: very comfortable

  • 1.5-2: healthy
  • 1-1.5: adequate
  • < 1: liquidity stress

Quick Ratio = (Current Assets - Inventory) / Current Liabilities

Stricter test — excludes hard-to-convert inventory.

Cash Ratio = Cash / Current Liabilities

The strictest liquidity measure.

Efficiency ratios

Asset Turnover = Revenue / Total Assets

How efficiently assets generate revenue. Higher is better; compare with industry.

Working Capital Cycle (Cash Conversion Cycle): Days Inventory + Days Receivables - Days Payables = number of days cash is tied up in operations. Shorter is better.

What to watch for: red flags

Rising debt with declining cash flows: classic distress pattern.

Receivables growing faster than revenue for multiple quarters: often precedes earnings disappointments.

Inventory accumulation in business with seasonal demand: write-down risk.

Frequent debt rollovers: company may be unable to repay; needs more loans to repay older ones.

Subsidiary entanglements: complex web of subsidiaries can hide debt and intercompany dealings.

Repeated changes in accounting policies: suggests trying to manage earnings.

Auditor qualifications or changes: serious red flag.

High goodwill from acquisitions: write-down risk if those acquisitions don't perform.

Promoter pledging shares: visible only in additional disclosures, but related to company financial health.

Comparing balance sheets across industries

Balance sheet structures vary dramatically:

Banks: Most assets are loans (interest-earning); most liabilities are deposits. D/E is high (8-12×) by nature.

FMCG: Asset-light. Brand value (intangible) often more important than PPE. Low debt typical.

Capital-intensive (steel, cement, infrastructure): Large PPE, significant long-term debt. High D/E common.

IT services: Asset-light. Major asset is often "human capital" not on balance sheet. Low debt, large cash reserves typical.

Real estate: Inventory (work-in-progress) and receivables dominate. High debt typical.

Don't compare D/E or current ratio across these dramatically different industries — comparisons must be peer-to-peer.

Practical reading approach

For any company you're analyzing, look at:

  1. 5-7 year historical balance sheets (not just latest year)
  2. Trend in key ratios: debt growing? receivables ballooning? inventory accumulating?
  3. Comparison with 2-3 industry peers
  4. Notes to accounts: many critical details (debt covenants, contingent liabilities, related party transactions) live in footnotes
  5. Auditor's report: any qualifications? "Emphasis of matter" paragraphs?

The balance sheet doesn't get the attention earnings get, but it surfaces problems earlier and more reliably. Spend 30 minutes on every annual report's balance sheet section before investing — you'll catch most disasters before they happen.

Frequently asked questions

Why does the balance sheet always balance?

The fundamental equation: Assets = Liabilities + Shareholder Equity. Every rupee of assets is funded either by debt (liabilities) or by owners' capital (equity). They balance by construction. If you see a balance sheet that doesn't balance, there's an error in the data — it's a mathematical identity, not an analytical claim.

What's the difference between book value and market value?

Book value = total assets minus total liabilities, divided by shares outstanding. It's the accounting net worth per share. Market value = current stock price. They often differ significantly because (1) accounting may not reflect current asset values (especially intangibles like brand value, intellectual property), and (2) market prices in growth expectations and intangible competitive advantages. P/B (Price-to-Book) ratio captures this gap.

What's working capital and why does it matter?

Working capital = current assets minus current liabilities. It's the cash buffer for daily operations. Positive working capital means the company can pay short-term obligations comfortably. Negative working capital can be fine for some businesses (FMCG with fast inventory turn, restaurants with cash receipts) but disastrous for others (manufacturing, B2B). Watch for trends — rapidly declining working capital is often an early warning.

What's a healthy debt-to-equity ratio?

Depends on industry. Banks and financial services run at 8-10× D/E (their business is leverage). Capital-intensive industries (utilities, telecom, infrastructure) often run at 1-2×. FMCG, IT services, software typically run at 0-0.3×. Compare D/E vs industry peers and the company's own history. A trend of rising D/E often signals stress; falling D/E often signals strengthening balance sheet.

Related Jarviix tools

Read paired with the calculator that does the math.

Read next