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- November 17, 2010 at 1:25 pm #46056
sir
is overdraft included in debt when calculating gearing?November 17, 2010 at 9:12 pm #70943AnonymousInactive- Topics: 1
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Hi,
There is no universal definition of GEARING.
In F9, I find it makes a lot of sense to define Gearing as D:E (i.e the ratio of debt to equity). Some commentators measure gearing as the ratio of Debt to Equity + DEBT (or, debt to total capital employed).
Like I have said, my preference is to always advise (for many reasons) using the D:E approach were possible.
In the case of the numerator (Debt) there is again no hard and fast rule when it comes to selecting the components to include here. You need to look carefully at the components of the Capital Structure of the Balance sheet in the question when deciding on the components to use in your definition of Debt. But I would suggest following this rule-of-thumb: DEBT = Long Term Debt + Bank Overdraft – Cash Balance + Preference Capital
Often B/O finance can be significant in terms of risk and size and so in my opinion it is safer to always include it in your calculation of capital gearing.
In the case of the denominator (EQUITY), include here the Issued Share Capital + ALL the Reserves
Finally, the Gearing Ratio can be measured using BOOK or Market Values. It makes more sense to measure gearing using market values, but in reality it is normally measured in BOOK terms! However, as far as the F9 exam is concerned your focus needs to be primarily on the use of Market Values to measure the Capital Gearing Ratio.
Hope this helps, Kevin Kelly
November 18, 2010 at 3:47 pm #70944thanks, it helps a lot….
deducting cash would be acceptable for the marker, right?November 18, 2010 at 3:54 pm #70945please kindly answer my other questions too..
November 18, 2010 at 9:42 pm #70946AnonymousInactive- Topics: 1
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Hi jatinkalra,
I think it would be foolish, or at least not very practical, to ignore cash when including overdraft finance in the calculation of Capital Gearing… and I believe overdraft finance must be included in the gearing calculation in the first place.
Remember gearing is meant to reflect how the company is financed or rather reflect the FINANCIAL RISK of the company … so how can you ignore the cash balance when trying to assess the financial risk of the company ?
Would you agree ?
Regards, Kevin Kelly
November 19, 2010 at 12:08 am #70947That makes perfect sense.
so you suggest that we take a more logical approach rather than the theoritical approach…i totally agree…
thanks a lot sir…that financial risk angle really made it very clear…
i had asked 2-3 more questions on the forum if you could answer those too…
thanks again
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