23. Why Should Financial Ratios Be Compared with Industry Benchmarks?
In financial analysis, ratios are vital tools to evaluate a company’s performance. However, a ratio alone lacks meaning unless placed in context. Industry benchmarks—standardized financial indicators from comparable companies in the same sector—provide that context.
At ATS Academy, we emphasize that comparing financial ratios with industry benchmarks is not just good practice—it’s essential for informed, accurate, and actionable decisions.
1. Contextualizes Raw Financial Data
Example: A company with a Current Ratio of 1.2
Alone: Indicates ₹1.20 in current assets for every ₹1 of current liabilities.
Compared to industry average 2.0: Suggests potential liquidity issues.
Compared to industry average 1.0: Indicates stronger performance than peers.
Conclusion: Ratios in isolation are insufficient. Benchmarks provide context to assess what is normal or healthy for that industry.
2. Reveals Competitive Positioning
Example: Company A has a ROE of 18%
Industry average 12% → Company is more efficient at generating profits.
Industry average 25% → Company may be underperforming.
Comparing ratios with benchmarks helps answer: “Is this company ahead of, behind, or on par with the industry?”
3. Uncovers Strengths and Weaknesses
Strengths: Industry-leading gross margins, low debt levels, high efficiency ratios.
Weaknesses: Lagging in inventory turnover or operating margins.
Example: An FMCG company with a low Inventory Turnover Ratio compared to peers may indicate overstocking or inefficient inventory management—red flags for investors and management alike.
4. Improves Valuation Accuracy
Relative valuation metrics like P/E, P/B, EV/EBITDA are meaningful only when benchmarked.
Example:
Low P/E → Potential undervaluation or poor growth.
High P/E → Market confidence or possible overvaluation.
Benchmarks help distinguish genuine value from potential traps.
5. Supports Sector-Specific Decision Making
Industries differ in cost structures, capital requirements, and risk profiles.
Examples:
Banking & NBFCs → Capital adequacy, net interest margins.
Retail → Inventory turnover, gross margins.
Pharma → R&D spend, EBITDA margins.
Benchmarks make financial interpretation sector-sensitive and relevant.
6. Helps in Risk Assessment
Example: A Debt-to-Equity Ratio of 2.0
Normal in infrastructure or telecom (long-term capital projects).
Risky in IT or services sector.
Benchmarks help filter out industry norms, avoiding false alarms or overlooked risks.
7. Useful in Strategic Planning and Forecasting
Knowing where a company stands relative to industry benchmarks guides:
Cost optimization
Capital allocation
Pricing strategy
Growth planning
Enables businesses to:
Set realistic goals
Identify best practices from peers
Track improvement over time
Key Takeaway for ATS Academy Learners
“Numbers without context are just numbers. Industry benchmarks transform those numbers into meaningful insights.”