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gearing ratio

   Also found in: Financial, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

gearing ratio

Ratio of a company's permanent loan capital (preference shares and long-term loans) to its equity (ordinary shares plus reserves).

If the gearing ratio is above 100%, then the company is considered to be highly geared (having more long-term debt than equity). This means that if the company goes through bad trading conditions, because the economy goes into recession for example, it will face more difficulties than a company with a lower gearing ratio. This is because the company with the higher gearing ratio will have to carry on paying interest on its loans whereas a company with a lower gearing but the same amount of loans plus equity can cut the dividends paid to shareholders.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
to 50% from 42%, but the higher gearing ratio is "still manageable.
not possible to calculate a reliable gearing ratio from published accounts.
Standard & Poor's notes, however, that the mutual's gearing ratio (debt as a percentage of total adjusted equity) has increased over the last two years to 18% in 1997 from 13% in 1994.
 
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