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Argonaut Resources NL (AGREF) Debt-to-Equity Ratio

As of May 23, 2026

TL;DR — AGREF debt-to-equity is N/A

Argonaut Resources NL (AGREF) currently carries a debt-to-equity ratio of N/A (not available). Interest coverage is N/A and the current ratio is 20.03. Debt-to-equity is not yet populated for this ticker.

Current leverage profile

Debt / Equity

N/A

Total debt / shareholder equity

Interest coverage

N/A

EBIT / interest expense

Current ratio

20.03

Short-term liquidity

D/E in isolation is a starting point, not a verdict. To get a credible read on solvency you also want to see interest coverage above 3x (so EBIT comfortably pays interest) and a current ratio above 1.2 (so short-term assets cover short-term obligations). When those two are healthy, even a higher D/E is usually manageable.

5-Year debt-to-equity trend

Historical D/E series is not yet available for AGREF.

Industry comparison

Sector D/E median is not yet available for this ticker.

Interpreting AGREF's debt-to-equity

What "Not available" means here: Debt-to-equity is not yet populated for this ticker.

Sector context matters: a D/E of 1.5 in financials or utilities is normal. The same number in software or pharma is a yellow flag. Always anchor your read against the sector median above before forming a view.

Watch the direction: a slowly rising D/E is fine if return on invested capital (see the fundamentals page) is comfortably above the cost of debt. A rapidly rising D/E paired with deteriorating ROIC is the classic distressed-equity pattern.

Stress test: ask yourself what AGREF looks like if revenue drops 20% for two years. With its current interest coverage of N/A, can the company keep paying interest? The Altman Z-Score on the fundamentals page is a quick formal version of this question.

Related AGREF analyses

Frequently asked about AGREF debt-to-equity

What is AGREF's debt-to-equity ratio?

Debt-to-equity is not yet populated for AGREF — try again after the next 12-hour cache refresh.

How is debt-to-equity calculated?

Debt-to-equity = total debt / shareholders' equity. Total debt usually includes both short-term and long-term interest-bearing borrowings (sometimes called total liabilities in older definitions). We use the FMP "debtEquityRatioTTM" field, which is total debt over equity on a trailing twelve-month basis.

Is AGREF's D/E ratio safe?

Without a D/E reading we can't assess solvency. Cross-check with current ratio and interest coverage from the fundamentals page.

How does AGREF compare to the Basic Materials average?

Sector debt benchmarks for this ticker are still being ingested.

When is high debt-to-equity dangerous?

High D/E is dangerous when (1) cash flow coverage is weak (interest coverage below 3x), (2) earnings are cyclical or capital-intensive, (3) refinancing exposure is concentrated in the next 12-24 months, (4) the company is paying out a large dividend or running buybacks while issuing more debt. Conversely, high D/E can be perfectly fine for stable-cash-flow utilities, REITs, and regulated financials — context matters.

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