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Debt-to-Equity Ratio: The Number That Tells You If a Company Is Drowning

Author: Nate Gregory
Published: Apr 28, 2026 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:
  • The debt-to-equity ratio compares what a company owes to what shareholders own.
  • The formula is total liabilities divided by total shareholder equity.
  • Lower ratios mean less risk - one of the value markers Warren Buffett looks for.

A company can look like a winner from the outside. Strong revenue, growing profits, a famous CEO. But if it's drowning in debt, none of that matters when the next downturn hits.

That's why investors use the debt-to-equity ratio. It's a quick check on how risky a company really is, and it takes about two minutes to calculate.

The debt-to-equity ratio is one piece of the daily research investors do. For the broader market context - what's moving, what's at risk, what to watch - subscribe to Market Briefs. It's our free daily newsletter, delivered every morning. Subscribe free here.

What the Debt-to-Equity Ratio Tells Investors

The debt-to-equity ratio compares two things on a company's balance sheet. The first is total liabilities, which is everything the company owes. The second is total shareholder equity, which is what's left for owners after debts are paid.

Think of it like your own finances. If you have $100,000 in assets and $80,000 in debt, your equity is $20,000. The ratio of debt to equity would be 4 to 1, which is a lot of leverage. If something goes wrong, you have very little cushion. (This is the same logic behind good debt vs. bad debt for individuals.)

For a company, a lower ratio means less debt relative to what shareholders own. That usually means less risk if business slows down. Companies with low debt can weather a recession. Companies drowning in debt often can't.

Where the Numbers Live: The Balance Sheet

Both numbers come from the balance sheet, which is one of three financial statements in every 10-K filing. You can pull a 10-K free from SEC EDGAR.

The balance sheet must balance, meaning assets equal liabilities plus shareholder equity. So if you know any two numbers, you can always work out the third.

Assets are what the company owns. They split into two parts: current assets (things that can be turned into cash within 12 months, like cash, accounts receivable, and inventory) and non-current assets (longer-term assets, like buildings and equipment). The gap between current assets and current liabilities is called working capital - another key short-term safety check.

Liabilities are what the company owes. They also split into current (debts due within 12 months) and non-current (debts due later, like long-term loans).

Shareholder equity is what's left over - the value that belongs to shareholders if the company sold everything and paid off its debts.

Debt-to-Equity Ratio Formula and How to Calculate It

The math is simple. Take total liabilities and divide by total shareholder equity.

Here's the formula written out:

Debt-to-Equity Ratio = Total Liabilities ÷ Total Shareholder Equity

If a company has $50 billion in liabilities and $100 billion in equity, the ratio is 0.5. That means for every dollar of shareholder ownership, the company has 50 cents of debt.

Now flip it. If a company has $100 billion in liabilities and $50 billion in equity, the ratio is 2.0 - two dollars of debt for every dollar of equity. That's a riskier position.

A ratio of 1.0 means liabilities and equity are equal. There's no magic line, but the trend matters more than the number itself.

Real Examples: Microsoft, Coca-Cola, and Nvidia

Let's run real numbers from real 10-Ks.

Microsoft Debt-to-Equity Example

Microsoft's 2024 10-K showed total assets of about $512 billion and total liabilities of $243 billion. That means shareholder equity was around $269 billion.

Debt-to-equity = $243B ÷ $269B = about 0.9

A 0.9 ratio means Microsoft has roughly 90 cents of debt for every dollar of shareholder equity. That's manageable, especially for a company generating $88 billion in net income annually.

Coca-Cola Balance Sheet Snapshot

Coca-Cola's 10-K showed total assets of about $100 billion. They have a long history of using debt to fund growth, and their ratio has historically been higher than Microsoft's.

For consumer staples companies like Coca-Cola, a higher ratio is often acceptable because cash flow is so predictable. They sell sugary drinks every day, in every country, regardless of the economy.

Nvidia's Lean Balance Sheet

Nvidia's 2024 10-K showed total liabilities of just $32 billion. For a company with a market cap over $4 trillion at the time, that's a tiny debt load.

That low debt is one reason Nvidia could keep investing aggressively in AI infrastructure without worrying about creditors.

What Counts as a Good Debt-to-Equity Ratio

There's no single magic number, because it depends on the industry. Banks and utilities normally carry more debt because of how their businesses work. Tech companies often carry less. Real estate companies almost always run high debt-to-equity ratios because property is bought with mortgages.

That's why you should compare a company's ratio to its industry peers, not to a broad average. Pair it with other valuation metrics like P/E ratio, price-to-book ratio, and return on equity to get a fuller picture.

What you really want to look for is the trend over time. Is debt growing faster than equity? That's a yellow flag. Is debt shrinking while equity grows? That's a green flag.

Why Low Debt Is a Value Investing Marker

Value investors like Warren Buffett favor companies with low debt levels. It's one of the seven value markers we teach in our Zero to Pro program.

The seven value markers are:

  • Consistent revenue over time
  • Established brand recognition
  • Strong competitive advantages (a moat)
  • Stable earnings
  • Dividend payments
  • Low debt levels
  • Trading at a lower price relative to historical averages

Companies that hit several of these markers are often candidates for value investing. McDonald's, Campbell's Soup, and Nike are classic examples. They aren't flashy, but they're stable, predictable, and protected by deep moats. (For more advanced valuation tools that also factor in debt, check out enterprise value and EV/EBITDA.)

Low debt protects these companies during recessions. While other companies are forced to cut dividends, sell off assets, or take on emergency loans, low-debt companies just keep operating.

How High Debt Can Sink a Company

The opposite extreme is what happened to Pets.com during the dot-com bubble.

Pets.com was an e-commerce platform just for pet supplies. They raised hundreds of millions in funding. They spent $1.2 million on a single Super Bowl ad. They had heavy marketing debt and were selling products at a loss to grow market share.

It worked for a while. Then the bubble popped, the cash dried up, and Pets.com went bankrupt in less than two years as a public company.

Companies like Webvan and eToys had similar stories - heavy spending, big debt, no real path to profitability. When the music stopped, they didn't survive.

Compare that to Amazon, which had real revenue, real margins, and a manageable debt load. Amazon's stock fell 94% during the same period - from $106 in 1999 to $6 in 2001 - but the underlying business survived because the balance sheet held. The ones with too much debt didn't.

How to Use the Debt-to-Equity Ratio Today

Pick a stock you own. Pull its latest 10-K from EDGAR and find the balance sheet. Calculate the ratio: total liabilities divided by total shareholder equity.

Then compare it to a competitor in the same industry. If you're checking Microsoft, also calculate Apple's. If you're checking Coca-Cola, also check Pepsi. The relative comparison tells you more than the absolute number. (This is also a key part of how to evaluate a company's financial health.)

Track the trend over the last three years. Is it improving, holding steady, or getting worse?

You'll see right away which companies are running lean and which are stretched thin. Combined with the other value markers, the debt-to-equity ratio gives you a real read on long-term safety. (Need to brush up on the lingo? The 77+ stock market terms guide covers every term in this article.)

The debt-to-equity ratio is one number on a long list of things investors track. To stay on top of the rest, subscribe to Market Briefs - our free daily newsletter that breaks down the news moving stocks every morning.


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