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How to Read a Balance Sheet for Stock Investors in India

How to Read a Balance Sheet for Stock Investors in India

A balance sheet is a financial snapshot of a company at a specific point in time, it shows what the company owns (assets), what it owes (liabilities), and what belongs to shareholders (equity). Reading balance sheets is the first skill every stock investor must develop.

The Balance Sheet Equation

Assets = Liabilities + Shareholders’ Equity. This equation always balances. Everything a company owns was funded either by borrowing (liabilities) or by shareholder money (equity). Understanding this relationship helps you assess financial risk instantly.

Assets: What the Company Owns

Asset TypeExamplesWhat It Tells You
Fixed Assets / PPELand, buildings, plant, machineryHow capital-intensive the business is
Intangible AssetsBrand value, patents, goodwill from acquisitionsQuality of competitive advantage and acquisition history
InvestmentsShares in subsidiaries, mutual funds, bonds heldCapital allocation decisions by management
InventoriesRaw materials, work-in-progress, finished goodsInventory management efficiency (watch for bloat)
Trade ReceivablesMoney owed by customers (debtors)Collection efficiency; high DSO can signal problems
Cash and EquivalentsBank balances, liquid investmentsLiquidity buffer and financial flexibility
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Liabilities: What the Company Owes

Liability TypeExamplesRed Flag If…
Long-term BorrowingsBank loans, NCDs, debenturesDebt-to-equity ratio exceeds 1 for non-financial companies
Current LiabilitiesAccounts payable, short-term loansCurrent ratio falls below 1, immediate liquidity stress
Deferred Tax LiabilityTiming differences in tax recognitionGrowing faster than revenue may signal accounting issues
ProvisionsEmployee benefit obligations, warranty claimsGrowing much faster than revenue or headcount

Shareholders’ Equity: What Belongs to You

Shareholders’ equity = Assets minus Liabilities. It comprises share capital (face value of issued shares) and reserves and surplus (retained earnings accumulated over years). Book value per share = Total equity / Number of shares. Comparing book value to market price tells you whether the stock trades at a premium or discount to its net assets.

5 Key Balance Sheet Ratios

RatioFormulaHealthy RangeWhat It Measures
Debt-to-EquityTotal Debt / Shareholders Equity< 0.5 (non-financial)Financial leverage: risk from borrowing
Current RatioCurrent Assets / Current Liabilities> 1.5Short-term liquidity; can it pay near-term obligations?
Quick Ratio(Current Assets minus Inventory) / Current Liabilities> 1Immediate liquidity without selling inventory
Book Value per ShareTotal Equity / Shares OutstandingCompare to market priceNet asset value per share, floor valuation
Debt-to-EBITDATotal Debt / EBITDA< 3xDebt serviceability: years of EBITDA to repay debt

Red Flags to Watch For

  • Receivables growing much faster than revenue: customers not paying on time
  • Inventory piling up without corresponding revenue growth: demand slowdown
  • Goodwill on balance sheet increasing year after year: serial acquisition history without organic growth
  • Debt increasing while cash from operations is flat or declining
  • Contingent liabilities (in notes) that could become real liabilities: lawsuits, guarantees

How to Find Balance Sheets for Indian Companies

Visit BSE (bseindia.com) or NSE (nseindia.com) and search for the company. Go to the Financials section to download the annual report or quarterly balance sheet. Screener.in provides a clean, formatted view of 10 years of balance sheet data for free.

FAQs

How often is a balance sheet published?

Indian listed companies publish quarterly balance sheets as part of their financial results and a detailed annual balance sheet in their annual report.

Is a high cash balance always good?

Not necessarily. If a company has large cash on the balance sheet but is not deploying it productively (low ROCE despite high cash), it signals poor capital allocation.

What is working capital?

Working capital = Current Assets minus Current Liabilities. Positive and growing working capital generally signals a healthy, expanding business.

What is the difference between gross and net fixed assets?

Gross fixed assets = total cost of assets. Net fixed assets = gross assets minus accumulated depreciation. Net fixed assets show the remaining book value.

Can balance sheets be manipulated?

Yes. Common methods include aggressive capitalisation of expenses, inflating receivables, and understating liabilities. Always read the auditor’s report and notes to accounts for qualifications.

Disclaimer

The stocks mentioned in this article are not recommendations. Please conduct your own research and due diligence before investing. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks, read all the related documents carefully before investing. Please read the Risk Disclosure documents carefully before investing in Equity Shares, Derivatives, Mutual fund, and/or other instruments traded on the Stock Exchanges. As investments are subject to market risks and price fluctuation risk, there is no assurance or guarantee that the investment objectives shall be achieved. Lemonn (Formerly known as NU Investors Technologies Pvt. Ltd) do not guarantee any assured returns on any investments. Past performance of securities/instruments is not indicative of their future performance.

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