Altman Z-Score for Public Manufacturers Calculator
Compute the Altman Z-score (1968) for predicting bankruptcy risk in publicly traded manufacturers. Z combines five ratio...
Compute the Altman Z-score (1968) for predicting bankruptcy risk in publicly traded manufacturers. Z combines five ratio...
Compute the cash conversion cycle (CCC), the number of days a business's cash is tied up in operations: CCC = DIO + DSO...
Compute both markup % (over cost) and margin % (over revenue) from the same cost and selling price — and see how they di...
Calculates the number of alcohol units in a drink from its volume and ABV percentage, and the total standard drinks in a...
Compute days sales outstanding — the average number of days it takes a company to collect on its credit sales: DSO = Acc...
Compute the interest-only monthly payment on a Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) during its draw period, plus annual in...
Calculates net investment profit after applying a capital gains tax rate. Shows gross profit, tax owed, net profit, and...
Compare the after-tax retirement balance from contributing the same gross dollar amount to a Roth 401(k) (taxes paid now...
Estimate the after-tax retirement balance of a Roth IRA given current balance, annual contributions, expected return, an...
Compute the pre-tax (taxable) yield that would be required to match a tax-free municipal-bond yield, given your marginal...
Compute the compound annual growth rate (CAGR) — the smooth annual return that would take a starting amount to an ending...
Estimate how many months it takes to clear one debt under the snowball strategy when you add a fixed extra amount on top...
Needs, wants, and savings at 50/30/20 is a starting point — not a rulebook. Here is how to adapt it when your life doesn't fit neatly into t...
A calm, jargon-free walkthrough of what actually drives your monthly mortgage payment — and how to make the number smaller.
We pulled usage data across our 30 most-visited calculators to understand how readers actually use consumer finance tools. Findings, caveats...
The same $250 a month looks unremarkable for a decade and then suddenly dominates the chart. Here is why compounding behaves that way.