Senior Debt to Tangible Net Worth Ratio

An analyst may want to exclude intangible assets from the calculation of net equity when constructing a debt to worth ratio.  You would subtract net intangible assets from the denominator to make this adjustment.  This results in a higher (but more conservative and maybe also a more accurate) measurement of leverage.
 
As described earlier, the debt to worth ratio represents capital contributed by creditors to capital contributed by owners.  If you examine the Smith Heating and Cooling, Inc. balance sheet, you will see that some of the company’s debt is actually due to an owner.  An analyst might consider this to be a form of equity and alter the ratio accordingly to take a truer picture of leverage.
 
To do this, you would subtract loans from owners from total liabilities in the numerator and add the same amount to equity in the denominator.  Only “senior debt” or the bank debt in the first position in the event of liquidation is actually included in liabilities in this case.
 
Making these adjustments results in a “senior debt to tangible net worth ratio.”  For Smith Heating and Cooling, Inc., this ratio is $9.44 to 1, which is still pretty high.  The company is, indeed, highly leveraged.  But, the ratio is more meaningful in this case, and this number can be compared to an industry average to see how it measures up.
 

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