Choose language
Fundamental

Debt-to-Equity Ratio: How Much Leverage Is Too Much for Indian Stocks

Debt destroys more Indian companies than any other single financial factor. This guide explains the Debt-to-Equity ratio, the interest coverage check, sector-specific safe thresholds, and the 4 red flags that signal balance-sheet stress before it hits the stock price.

9 min readPublished 24 May 2026

DHFL, IL&FS, Suzlon, Reliance Power, Jet Airways. Different sectors, same root cause — debt that the business couldn't service. The Debt-to-Equity (D/E) ratio is the single fastest red flag for balance-sheet stress. Master this one metric and you avoid 80% of value traps that look cheap on P/E but bleed to zero.

The formula

D/E = Total Debt / Shareholder Equity

Total Debt = short-term debt + long-term debt + current maturities of long-term debt. Shareholder Equity = paid-up capital + reserves & surplus. Both from the balance sheet.

Reading: D/E 0.5 means ₹0.50 of debt for every ₹1 of equity. D/E 2.0 means ₹2 of debt for every ₹1 of equity.

Sector-specific safe thresholds

SectorSafe D/ECaution zoneDistress signal
IT services< 0.10.1 - 0.3> 0.3
FMCG / Consumer< 0.30.3 - 0.6> 0.6
Pharma< 0.40.4 - 0.7> 0.7
Auto / Manufacturing< 0.60.6 - 1.0> 1.0
Capital goods / Engineering< 0.80.8 - 1.3> 1.3
Real estate< 0.70.7 - 1.5> 1.5
NBFC3 - 5 (norm)5 - 7> 7
Bank8 - 10 (norm)10 - 12> 12 or CRAR < 11

Banks and NBFCs have structurally high D/E because debt = customer deposits / borrowings used to lend. The right metric for them is CRAR (Capital Adequacy Ratio), not D/E. Anything below regulatory minimum (11% for banks, 15% for NBFCs) = distress.

Interest Coverage Ratio — the survival metric

D/E tells you how much debt. ICR tells you whether the company can pay the interest.

ICR = EBIT / Interest Expense

IL&FS had ICR of 1.4 in FY18 — should have flagged distress. Default came 6 months later.

The 4 red flags that signal stress

1. D/E rising YoY for 3+ years

Even healthy D/E (say 0.4) becomes a red flag if it's trending from 0.2 → 0.3 → 0.4 over 3 years. Means the business is funding growth via debt, not retained earnings — leverage spiral starting.

2. ICR declining while D/E rises

Worst combination. More debt, less ability to service it. Reliance Power 2015-2019 showed this pattern.

3. Short-term debt > 40% of total debt

Indicates the company is rolling over working capital with bank loans, not term debt. Refinancing risk if liquidity dries up (which happened to NBFCs in 2018 IL&FS crisis).

4. Promoter share pledge > 30%

Not directly D/E, but parallel signal. If promoters pledge their own shares for personal loans, they're leveraged at the personal level too. Force-sell of pledged shares during stock decline = death spiral.

BSE/NSE publishes promoter pledge disclosures quarterly. Many investors miss this. Above 30% pledge = serious caution. Above 60% = avoid regardless of other metrics.

D/E in DuPont — how leverage inflates ROE

Recall: ROE = Net Margin × Asset Turnover × Leverage. Leverage here = Assets / Equity = 1 + D/E.

A company with 8% net margin × 1.0× asset turnover × 3× leverage = 24% ROE. Looks elite. But that 3× leverage comes from D/E = 2 — distress zone for most sectors.

High ROE with high leverage isn't quality. It's engineered profit at higher risk. Use the DuPont breakdown to filter for businesses earning ROE via margin + asset turnover, NOT leverage.

The screening framework

  1. D/E ≤ sector safe threshold (see table above).
  2. ICR ≥ 5 for 3+ consecutive years.
  3. D/E trend stable or declining over 3-5 years.
  4. Short-term debt ≤ 40% of total debt.
  5. Promoter pledge < 15%.

Companies passing all 5 filters are the structurally sound ones. Combined with quality (ROE ≥ 15%) and reasonable valuation (P/E in line with sector), these are the long-term compounders worth holding through cycles.

Where to find the data

Don't trust headline financial-summary numbers alone. Always cross-check the balance sheet itself for the most recent quarter, not last-annual data which can be 6-12 months stale.

Use the DCF calculator with proper debt input to estimate intrinsic value with leverage-aware discount rates. Higher D/E = higher beta = higher WACC = lower intrinsic value.

Weekly market setups, delivered free

One short email every Sunday — 3 high-conviction signals + 1 calculator deep-dive. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

We respect privacy. No paid spam. SEBI-compliant educational content only.

Apply the math — related calculators

Run your own numbers in < 30 seconds.

Live screens for this strategy

Continue reading