Industry Benchmark
Cash Pulse™
Normal Quick Ratio: What's Normal and What's Not
Quick ratio - cash plus receivables divided by current liabilities - measures ability to meet short-term obligations without selling inventory. It reveals whether you can pay bills with truly liquid assets.
TAKEAWAYS
- 2.0 current ratio with 0.7 quick ratio looks liquid but is not - gap is slow-converting inventory
- Quick ratio asks what you can actually pay with now, not what might eventually become cash
- Fast-moving inventory allows lower quick ratios, but disruption quickly creates crisis
Helcyon Insight
Quick ratio reveals true liquidity. Current ratio includes inventory, which may not convert quickly. Helcyon's Cash Pulse™ monitors quick ratio alongside current ratio - showing both total and immediately accessible liquidity. • Service businesses: Should maintain 1.0+ A business with 2.0 current ratio but 0.7 quick ratio looks liquid but isn't. The gap is inventory that may take months to convert. Quick ratio asks: 'What can you actually pay with now?' Businesses with fast-moving inventory can op
✓ Healthy Indicators
Quick ratio above 1.0, stable trend, receivables healthy.
✗ Warning Signs
Quick ratio below 0.8, declining trend, dependent on inventory liquidation.
Understanding the Benchmark
A business with 2.0 current ratio but 0.7 quick ratio looks liquid but isn't. The gap is inventory that may take months to convert. Quick ratio asks: 'What can you actually pay with now?' Businesses with fast-moving inventory can operate with lower quick ratios. But disruption quickly converts low ratio into crisis.
What Helcyon's Immune System™ Would Detect
Liquidity quality drift: Quick ratio declining while current ratio stable - inventory accumulating, consuming true liquidity.
Receivables contamination: Quick ratio at 1.1 but 30% in 60+ days - effective liquidity actually 0.8.
Gap widening: Spread between current and quick expanding - increasing inventory dependence.
Seasonal vulnerability: Quick ratio drops to 0.6 entering slow season - visible 60 days in advance.
Action Thresholds
When quick ratio below 1.0: Determine within 7 days whether inventory is truly liquid backup or false comfort.
If wide gap between current and quick ratio: Evaluate inventory investment within 14 days.
When quick ratio declining while current stable: Address inventory accumulation immediately.
The Bottom Line
Normal quick ratio should be above 1.0 - meaning you can cover obligations without selling inventory. Your Cash Pulse™ reveals both ratios together - showing total and true liquidity.
See how you compare
Helcyon compares your Business Vital Signs™ against industry benchmarks continuously - so you always know where you stand.
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