The First Marblehead Corporation (FMD)

Add to Watchlists Create an Alert
1.18 -0.07  -5.60%   NYSE May 22, 5:00PM BATS Real time Currency in USD

The First Marblehead Corporation Current Ratio:

1.123 for Dec. 31, 2012
View Full Chart

The First Marblehead Corporation Current Ratio Chart

    The First Marblehead Corporation Historical Current Ratio Data

    Pro Data Export
    Dates:  to
    Viewing 1 of 1   First  Previous First    Next  Last   Last

    There is no data for the selected date range.

    Data for this Date Range  
    March 31, 2013 1.123
    Dec. 31, 2012 1.426
    Sept. 30, 2012 2.512
    June 30, 2012 2.462
    March 31, 2012 1.903
    Dec. 31, 2011 3.546
    Sept. 30, 2011 2.107
    June 30, 2011 2.327
    March 31, 2011 7.994
    Dec. 31, 2010 12.07
    Sept. 30, 2010 12.88
    June 30, 2010 1.760
    March 31, 2010 15.00
    Dec. 31, 2009 25.54
    Sept. 30, 2009 12.69
    June 30, 2009 19.19
    March 31, 2009 4.559
    Dec. 31, 2008 12.73
    Sept. 30, 2008 30.29
    June 30, 2008 2.005
       
    March 31, 2008 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2007 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2007 Go Pro
    June 30, 2007 Go Pro
    March 31, 2007 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2006 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2006 Go Pro
    June 30, 2006 Go Pro
    March 31, 2006 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2005 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2005 Go Pro
    June 30, 2005 Go Pro
    March 31, 2005 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2004 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2004 Go Pro
    June 30, 2004 Go Pro
    March 31, 2004 Go Pro
    Dec. 31, 2003 Go Pro
    Sept. 30, 2003 Go Pro
    June 30, 2003 Go Pro

    About Current Ratio

    The current ratio measures a company's ability to pay short-term debts and other current liabilities (financial obligations lasting less than one year) by comparing current assets to current liabilities. The ratio illustrates a company's ability to remain solvent.

    A current ratio of one means that book value of current assets is exactly the same as book value of current liabilities. In general, investors look for a company with a current ratio of 2:1, meaning current assets twice as large as current liabilities. A current ratio less than one indicates the company might have problems meeting short-term financial obligations. If the ratio is too high, the company may not be efficiently using its current assets or short term financing facilities.

    Other similar solvency ratios include :
    Cash Ratio - Measures the amount of cash that can be used to pay liabilities (most strict)
    Quick Ratio - Measures the amount of cash, short term equivalents, and accounts receivables that can be used to pay liabilities (more lenient than cash ratio, but stricter than current ratio)
    Learn More

    Get data for

    FMD Current Ratio Benchmarks

    Companies
    Discover Financial Services 1.913
    Asset Acceptance Capital Corporation 14.35
    SLM 0.4748

    FMD Current Ratio Rankings

    Overall 53rd percentile
    3702 of 8005
    Sector 62nd percentile
    356 of 955 in Financial Services
    Industry 51st percentile
    21 of 43 in Credit Services

    FMD Current Ratio Range, Past 5 Years

    Minimum 1.123 Mar 2013
    Maximum 30.29 Sep 2008
    Average 8.705