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The Quick Ratio is sometimes called the "acid-test" ratio and is one of the best measures of liquidity. Quick Ratio or Acid Test Ratio = Quick Assets/ Current Liabilities
Where, Quick Assets = Current Assets −Inventories
Current Liabilities = As mentioned under Current Ratio.
The Quick Ratio is a much more conservative measure of short-term liquidity than the Current Ratio. It helps answer the question: "If all sales revenues should disappear, could my business meet its current obligations with the readily convertible quick funds on hand?" Quick Assets consist of only cash and near cash assets. Inventories are deducted from current assets on the belief that these are not ‘near cash assets’ and also because in times of financial difficulty inventory may be saleable only at liquidation value. But in a seller’s market inventories are also near cash assets. An acid-test of 1:1 is considered satisfactory unless the majority of "quick assets" are in accounts receivable, and the pattern of accounts receivable collection lags behind the schedule for paying current liabilities.
This ratio also called quick ratio or liquidity ratio it measures the ability of the company to use its liquid assets which is near to cash that's the reason while calculating this ratio we deduct the inventory from the Current Assets than divide it by the Current liability. This is the strong indicator which shows that the company have sufficient liquid assets to covers its immediate liability.
The acid-test ratio is a indicator to know the current assets for covering current liabilities
The acid-test ratio is a strong indicator of whether a firm has sufficient short-term assets to cover its immediate liabilities
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Acid-Test Ratio = (Cash + Marketable Securities + Accounts Receivable) / Current Liabilities
A common alternative formula is:
Acid-Test Ratio = (Current assets – Inventory) / Current Liabilities
The acid-test ratio is a more conservative version of another well-known liquidity metric -- the current ratio. Although the two are similar, the Acid-Test ratio provides a more rigorous assessment of a company's ability to pay its current liabilities. It does this by eliminating all but the most liquid of current assets from consideration. Inventory is the most notable exclusion, because it is not as rapidly convertible to cash and is often sold on credit. Some analysts include inventory in the ratio, though, if it is more liquid than certain receivables.
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