Table of Contents

Borrowing

The 30-Second Summary

What is Borrowing? A Plain English Definition

At its core, borrowing is simply using someone else's money with a promise to pay it back, plus a fee called interest. It's a concept we all understand. You borrow to buy a house (a mortgage) or a car (a car loan). In the world of investing, borrowing—often called leverage or gearing—plays a much bigger, and more dangerous, role. Think of it like this: Imagine you want to buy a small rental property for $100,000 that you believe will generate $10,000 in rent per year (a 10% return). If you pay all cash, your return is 10%. But what if you only put down $20,000 of your own money and borrow the other $80,000 from a bank at 5% interest?

You invested $20,000 of your own cash and made a profit of $6,000. Your return is now 30% ($6,000 / $20,000)! You've used borrowing to triple your return on your own capital. This is the magic of leverage. However, if the rental market slumps and you can only get $5,000 in rent, you still owe the bank $4,000 in interest. Your profit is now just $1,000. Your return plummets to 5%. If the property sits empty and your income is zero, you still owe the bank $4,000. Now you are losing money fast. This is the two-faced nature of borrowing. It is an accelerant. When things go right, it makes them go very right. When things go wrong, it makes them catastrophic. For a company, this can be the difference between a great year and bankruptcy.

“It's only when the tide goes out that you discover who's been swimming naked.” - Warren Buffett
1)

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

A value investor's primary goals are the preservation of capital and the steady, long-term compounding of wealth. Excessive borrowing is the sworn enemy of both of these goals. Here’s why it's a central focus of any serious investment analysis:

How to Analyze Corporate Debt

As an investor, you don't need to be a forensic accountant, but you absolutely must know how to check a company's debt levels and its ability to handle them. This is like checking the foundation of a house before you buy it.

Key Metrics to Watch

You can find all the necessary numbers on a company's financial statements, primarily the balance_sheet and the income statement.

  1. Debt-to-Equity Ratio (D/E): This is the most common leverage ratio. It compares the company's total debt to the amount of capital invested by shareholders.
    • Formula: `Total Liabilities / Shareholders' Equity`
    • What it means: A ratio of 1.0 means the company has $1 of debt for every $1 of equity. A ratio of 2.0 means it has twice as much debt as equity.
  2. Debt-to-Asset Ratio: This ratio shows what percentage of a company's assets are financed through debt.
    • Formula: `Total Debt / Total Assets`
    • What it means: A ratio of 0.5 means that 50% of the company's assets are funded by debt.
  3. Interest Coverage Ratio (or Times Interest Earned - TIE): This is perhaps the most important metric. It doesn't just look at how much debt a company has, but its ability to pay the interest on that debt from its current earnings.
    • Formula: `EBIT / Interest Expense` 2)
    • What it means: A ratio of 10x means the company's operating profits are 10 times greater than its interest expense for the period.

Interpreting the Numbers

A number in isolation is useless. The key is context.

A value investor generally looks for:

A Practical Example

Let's compare two fictional companies: “Steady Brew Coffee Co.” and “GoGo Growth Corp.”

Metric Steady Brew Coffee Co. GoGo Growth Corp.
Business Model Sells coffee, a stable consumer product. Predictable cash flows. Sells a trendy but unproven tech gadget. Volatile sales.
Total Debt $20 million $200 million
Shareholders' Equity $40 million $50 million
EBIT (Annual Profit) $10 million $25 million
Interest Expense (Annual) $1 million (at 5%) $20 million (at 10%)
Debt-to-Equity Ratio 0.5 (Low) 4.0 (Very High)
Interest Coverage Ratio 10.0x (Excellent) 1.25x (Dangerously Low)

Analysis: At first glance, GoGo Growth Corp. might look more exciting with its higher profits. But the value investor immediately sees the danger. Its debt is four times its equity, and a small dip in profits would mean it couldn't even afford to pay its lenders. A recession could easily bankrupt it. Steady Brew, on the other hand, is a fortress. Its debt is modest, and it earns $10 for every $1 it owes in interest. It can easily withstand an economic downturn, continue investing in its business, and perhaps even buy out weaker, over-leveraged competitors like GoGo Growth Corp. when they falter. This is the kind of financial strength a value investor prizes above all else.

The Dangers of Personal Borrowing (Margin)

While we've focused on corporate debt, it's critical to address personal borrowing for investing, known as buying on margin. This is when you borrow money from your broker to buy more stock than you could with your own cash. Value investors almost universally shun margin. Why? Because it introduces a risk you cannot control: the margin call. If the value of your stocks falls, your broker can demand you put up more cash immediately. If you can't, they are legally entitled to sell your stocks at the worst possible time—when the market is down—to get their money back. This can turn a temporary paper loss into a permanent, devastating real loss.

“My partner Charlie says there are only three ways a smart person can go broke: liquor, ladies and leverage.” - Warren Buffett

Using margin forces you to focus on the short-term stock price, which is the exact opposite of the long-term business focus that value investing requires. It is the fastest way to get forced out of a great investment at a bad price.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths (When Debt Can Be Smart)

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

1)
This famous quote is often used to describe how economic downturns reveal which companies were relying on excessive debt to create the illusion of success.
2)
EBIT stands for Earnings Before Interest and Taxes. It's a measure of a company's core profitability before the effects of debt and taxes.