Passenger Airlines Companies By Current Ratio

Current Ratio
Current RatioEfficiencyMarket RiskExp Return
1JOBY Joby Aviation
39.24
(0.04)
 5.61 
(0.20)
2BLDE Blade Air Mobility
15.03
(0.06)
 4.39 
(0.27)
3LUV Southwest Airlines
1.58
(0.06)
 1.49 
(0.09)
4ALGT Allegiant Travel
1.53
(0.01)
 3.23 
(0.02)
5SNCY Sun Country Airlines
1.1
 0.11 
 2.66 
 0.29 
6RYAAY Ryanair Holdings PLC
1.08
 0.06 
 1.82 
 0.11 
7UAL United Airlines Holdings
1.03
 0.00 
 2.50 
 0.01 
8SKYW SkyWest
1.01
(0.11)
 2.12 
(0.24)
9CPA Copa Holdings SA
0.97
 0.02 
 1.78 
 0.04 
10ALK Alaska Air Group
0.81
 0.21 
 2.67 
 0.55 
11JBLU JetBlue Airways Corp
0.81
 0.05 
 5.15 
 0.28 
12AAL American Airlines Group
0.79
 0.03 
 3.03 
 0.10 
13VLRS Volaris
0.75
(0.08)
 2.96 
(0.23)
14ULCC Frontier Group Holdings
0.62
 0.11 
 4.89 
 0.55 
15LTM LATAM Airlines Group
0.58
 0.19 
 1.43 
 0.26 
16DAL Delta Air Lines
0.57
(0.01)
 2.27 
(0.02)
17UP Wheels Up Experience
0.54
(0.32)
 3.58 
(1.15)
18AZUL Azul SA
0.42
(0.08)
 5.12 
(0.40)
19MESA Mesa Air Group
0.4
 0.03 
 4.28 
 0.11 
20023551AJ3 US023551AJ38
0.0
(0.03)
 0.78 
(0.02)
The analysis above is based on a 90-day investment horizon and a default level of risk. Use the Portfolio Analyzer to fine-tune all your assumptions. Check your current assumptions here.
Current Ratio is calculated by dividing the Current Assets of a company by its Current Liabilities. It measures whether or not a company has enough cash or liquid assets to pay its current liability over the next fiscal year. The ratio is regarded as a test of liquidity for a company. Typically, short-term creditors will prefer a high current ratio because it reduces their overall risk. However, investors may prefer a lower current ratio since they are more concerned about growing the business using assets of the company. Acceptable current ratios may vary from one sector to another, but the generally accepted benchmark is to have current assets at least as twice as current liabilities (i.e., Current Ration of 2 to 1).