From the course: Finance and Accounting Tips
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The current ratio and liquidity
From the course: Finance and Accounting Tips
The current ratio and liquidity
- An important concern about any company is its liquidity, or ability to pay its debts in the short run. If a firm can't meet its obligations in the short run, it may not survive to enjoy the long run. The most commonly used measure of liquidity is the current ratio, which is a comparison of current assets with current liabilities. And let me remind you of what a current asset is and what a current liability is. A current asset is an asset expected to be used or turned into cash within one year. So, for example, accounts receivable. That's a current asset because we expect those accounts to be collected in cash within one year. Inventory's a current asset because we expect that inventory to be sold and then the cash collected all within one year. Land is not typically a current asset because if we come back a year from now, we expect that land to still be here. Cash is the best current asset because it's already cash. So, our current assets are the liquid assets, the ones that we…
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Overview of the balance sheet6m 36s
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Limitations of the balance sheet5m 33s
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Accrual accounting3m 10s
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Income statement4m 36s
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How to common-size the income statement3m 16s
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Financial statement ratios4m 10s
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The DuPont framework and return on equity4m 35s
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Debits and credits5m 53s
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Understand a company's operating cycle5m 9s
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How to compute days' purchases in payables3m 41s
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The current ratio and liquidity4m 4s
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Leverage ratios6m 49s
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When to capitalize or expense costs4m 48s
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Timing of revenue recognition6m 57s
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The statement of cash flows5m 46s
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Earnings management6m 20s
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What is depreciation?4m 19s
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Forecasting financial statements5m 2s
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Dividends and stock buybacks5m 46s
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Loan payments: Understand interest and principal4m 40s
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Price maker or price taker and the impact of overhead costs4m
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Activity-based costing (ABC) and overhead4m 6s
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Cost-volume-profit analysis4m 48s
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Contribution margin and the sales mix of products4m 11s
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Save early, save often4m 12s
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Take the 401(k) match4m 27s
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Making extra payments3m 26s
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Low introductory interest rates4m 14s
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LIFO, FIFO, and FISH4m 31s
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Different depreciation methods3m 38s
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Capital asset pricing model (CAPM)5m 22s
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Sarbanes-Oxley and internal controls3m 55s
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What is a derivative?5m 1s
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Accounting for gift cards3m 57s
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What is beta?5m 52s
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What is an IPO?5m 8s
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Components of a compensation package3m 11s
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Impairment4m 10s
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Earnings per share4m 7s
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Calculate a car payment4m 52s
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Deferred taxes6m
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Foreign currency transactions5m 13s
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What do auditors do?5m 48s
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Steps in creating a personal budget4m 41s
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Pensions3m 53s
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Obtaining financial information4m 46s
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Internal controls6m 14s
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Standards and variances3m 30s
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What is corporate governance?4m 7s
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