Altman Z-Score
A multi-factor bankruptcy prediction model combining five financial ratios into a single score.
What is Altman Z-Score?
The Altman Z-Score, developed by NYU professor Edward Altman in 1968, combines five weighted financial ratios into a single score that predicts the probability of corporate bankruptcy within two years. Originally validated on public manufacturing companies, it remains widely used by credit analysts, lenders, and investors. Scores above 2.99 indicate a 'Safe Zone'; scores between 1.81 and 2.99 are the 'Grey Zone'; scores below 1.81 suggest significant distress risk. Modified versions exist for private firms and non-manufacturers.
Formula
Worked Example
FY2024
Source: Apple 10-K FY2024 (2024-11-01)
Calculate Altman Z-Score
Current assets minus current liabilities (can be negative), in millions of USD
Accumulated retained earnings from the balance sheet (can be negative), in millions of USD
Earnings before interest and taxes in millions of USD
Total market capitalization in millions of USD
Total liabilities from the balance sheet in millions of USD
Total assets from the balance sheet in millions of USD
Total annual revenue in millions of USD
Altman Z-Score
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How to Interpret Altman Z-Score
📚 Return Metrics — Complete the path
- ROA
- ROIC
- DuPont 3-Step
- BVPS
- Altman Z-Score