The Mercury News

Current and quick

To inform, to amuse, and to help you make money

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Q AWhat’s a company’s “current ratio”? — H.L., Detroit

It’s the company’s current assets divided by its current liabilitie­s. This ratio reflects whether it has enough short-term assets (such as cash and expected incoming payments) to cover its shortterm obligation­s (such as payments due).

A more meaningful metric is the “quick ratio,” as that calculatio­n subtracts assets that aren’t as liquid — such as inventorie­s, supplies and prepaid expenses — before dividing by current liabilitie­s. (These figures are all found on a company’s balance sheet.)

It’s good to check out a company’s current debt condition, but understand that it’s only one part of the whole picture — it ignores, for example, long-term debt.

When considerin­g any company for your portfolio, assess other factors, such as revenue and earnings growth rates, profit margins, inventory levels, competitiv­e advantages and valuation metrics. You can learn more about evaluating and investing in stocks at the “Investing Basics” nook at Fool. com, and also at Morningsta­r.com.

Q

I’ve made some profits in penny stocks as a beginning investor. Can you recommend any good lowpriced stocks?

—K.w.,hoover,

Alabama

A

Yikes — you’ve really lucked out if you haven’t lost money in penny stocks. Often tied to small and unprofitab­le companies, penny stocks can be extremely risky, and many people have lost their shirts in them.

Don’t assume that if you don’t have a lot of money to invest, you have to stick with lowpriced stocks. Yes, you can buy 600 shares of a $1 stock for just $600. But it stands a good chance of becoming a $0.50 stock or a $0.01 stock. Instead, you could just buy 20 shares of a healthy and growing company’s $30 stock or three shares of a $200 stock. It’s been cutting costs and becoming leaner, but it has also remained unprofitab­le — burning cash.

You needn’t avoid investing in every new industry, but know that it can take years before it’s clear which companies in an industry will end up dominant and profitable. Unprofitab­le businesses can be OK to invest in, too, as long as they’re likely to become profitable at an acceptable point. But sticking with already profitable, well-run and growing companies is safer and can serve you better.

The marijuana industry is promising. A little research might turn up more attractive companies than Aurora Cannabis.

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