Why your current ratio looks ‘healthy’ (until the bank checks it)
As a business owner or CFO, you keep a close eye on your financial statements. You see a current ratio of 2.0 or more – textbook “healthy” – and feel confident walking into a bank meeting for a loan or facility renewal. But then the lender’s questions take a sharp turn. They’re dissecting your working capital, questioning asset classifications, and suddenly, that robust ratio doesn’t seem to impress them.
Why? Because banks don’t just take your financial statements at face value. They recast them, applying conservative, standardized assumptions to see the true, liquid financial position of your business. A ratio you calculated for operational health might be very different from the one they calculate for credit risk. Understanding this gap is the key to preparing successfully for debt financing.
The liquidity lens: How lenders see your balance sheet
Lenders focus on liquidity ratios, primarily the current ratio (current assets / current liabilities) and the Quick Ratio, because they answer one fundamental question: If our cash inflow stopped today, could this business pay its bills coming due over the next 12 months?
A high current ratio suggests a cushion. But banks are skeptical by profession. Their job is to identify what within that cushion is truly liquid and available to service debt in a stress scenario.
Current vs. non-current: Why classification is everything
At its core, the distinction is about time.
Current assets
Current Assets are expected to be converted into cash, sold, or consumed within one normal operating cycle (usually one year). Examples include:
- Cash and cash equivalents
- Marketable securities
- Accounts Receivable (less than 90-120 days old)
- Inventory (that is saleable and not obsolete)
- Prepaid expenses
Non-current (fixed) assets
Non-current (fixed) assets are long-term resources used to operate the business, not for sale in the normal course. Examples include:
- Property, plant, and buildings
- Vehicles
- Machinery and equipment
- Long-term leases or investments
The critical point: Only current assets are used in the lender’s liquidity calculation. If something is incorrectly placed in the current bucket, it artificially inflates your perceived short-term financial strength.
Did you know? Equipment is a non-current (fixed) asset. It’s not intended to be sold for cash within the year to pay bills; it’s used to generate revenue over many years. Misclassifying it is a common error that seriously warps your current ratio. For a deeper dive, see this explainer: is equipment a current asset.
Common balance sheet mistakes that inflate your ratio
This is where many SMEs inadvertently mislead themselves. Lenders will find and correct these:
- Misclassified equipment or assets: The most frequent error. A piece of machinery, a company car, or even office furniture purchased for long-term use mistakenly listed under “current assets” because it was recently bought with cash or a short-term loan.
- Overvalued or stale inventory: Inventory that is obsolete, slow-moving, or requires significant work to sell is not “liquid.” Banks will apply a haircut or exclude it entirely from their adjusted working capital.
- Aged or uncollectible receivables: Receivables over 90-120 days are a red flag. Banks will often exclude anything over 90 days from their liquidity calculation, as it may indicate collection issues.
- Related-party receivables: Money owed to the company by shareholders, family members, or other related entities is often stripped out by lenders, as collecting it in a cash crunch may not be feasible or timely.
- Personal assets on the books: Mixing personal and business assets complicates the picture. Lenders will remove non-business assets to assess the core entity’s health.
By the numbers: How reclassification changes everything
Let’s look at a simplified example. ABC Manufacturing prepares a balance sheet for the bank.
Before lender adjustments:
| Item | Amount | Classification |
| Current assets | $500,000 | |
| Cash | $50,000 | |
| Accounts receivable | $200,000 | |
| Inventory | $200,000 | |
| New CNC machine | $50,000 | (Mistake: This is equipment) |
| Current liabilities | $250,000 | |
| Accounts payable | $150,000 | |
| Short-term debt | $100,000 | |
| Reported current ratio | 2.0 ($500k / $250k) | Looks “healthy” |
The bank’s analyst spots the error. The $50,000 CNC machine is clearly a fixed asset. They also note that $40,000 of the receivables are >90 days old and $30,000 of inventory is obsolete.
After lender adjustments:
| Item | amount | Adjusted amount |
| Adjusted current assets | $380,000 | |
| Cash | $50,000 | $50,000 |
| Accounts receivable | $200,000 | $160,000 (less $40k aged) |
| Inventory | $200,000 | $170,000 (less $30k obsolete) |
| New CNC machine | $50,000 | $0 (moved to fixed assets) |
| Current liabilities | $250,000 | $250,000 (no change) |
| Bank’s current ratio | 1.5 ($380k / $250k) | Significantly tighter |
The ratio drops from a comfortable 2.0 to a borderline 1.5. The conversation with the bank just shifted from “if” to “how” and “under what conditions.”
Inside the lender’s briefcase: What banks adjust and request
Banks follow a fairly standard playbook. Expect them to:
- Request detailed schedules: They will ask for an aged receivables report and an inventory breakdown (by type, age, turnover). This is where they find the items to adjust.
- Analyze add-backs aggressively: If you added back one-time expenses to your EBITDA, be prepared to justify them thoroughly. Lenders often disallow many add-backs.
- Apply covenant calculations: Your loan agreement won’t use your GAAP financials. It will define “eligible receivables,” “eligible inventory,” and “adjusted working capital” very specifically.
- Look for red flags:
- Consistently aged receivables.
- Inventory growth outpacing sales.
- Frequent, unexplained changes in accounting classifications.
- Maxed-out credit lines with no clear repayment ability.
- The “quality” of earnings – is cash flow matching profit?
Your pre-bank checklist: Get lender-ready
Don’t wait for the bank to find the problems. Audit yourself first.
1. Check your classifications:
- Review every item in “current assets.” Can it realistically be turned into cash to pay bills within 12 months?
- Physically walk the floor: Is that equipment listed as an asset still in use and in good condition? Is the inventory actually saleable?
- Scrutinize inter-company loans or shareholder loans – classify them correctly.
2. Improve liquidity without gimmicks:
- Aggressively collect old receivables. Implement stricter credit terms.
- Move obsolete inventory. Have a sale, write it down, and clear the space.
- Renegotiate terms with suppliers to align payables better with receivables cycles.
- Consider a sweep facility to optimize cash, but understand its impact on reported balances.
3. Prepare your documentation package:
- Clean, accrual-based financials for the last 3 years, plus interim statements.
- Detailed supporting schedules: Aged A/R, A/P, and inventory listings.
- A narrative explaining anomalies. Proactively explain a large prepaid expense, a one-time inventory build for a contract, or an aged receivable you’re actively collecting.
- Realistic 12-month cash flow forecast that shows how you’ll service the debt.
The bottom line
Your current ratio is a useful internal metric, but it’s the starting point, not the finish line, for a credit decision. By viewing your balance sheet through the lender’s conservative, liquidity-focused lens before you meet with them, you transform the conversation. You demonstrate financial sophistication, identify real weaknesses in your working capital management, and build credibility. The goal isn’t just to get the loan – it’s to build a stronger, more resilient business that banks want to support for the long term.

