Reading the Plimsoll Chart — at a glance.
A short visual guide to interpreting financial health the way thousands of UK boardrooms already do. Each chart tracks a company's overall financial strength over five years — the line's height shows strength, its direction shows momentum.
Complex financials, made visible
Plimsoll Publishing has been analysing company performance since the 1980s. The Plimsoll Chart simplifies five financial ratios into a single line — one you can read in seconds.
Why “Plimsoll”?
Named after the Plimsoll Line on ships — the historic safety mark that indicates when a vessel is overloaded. Our model acts in the same way for companies: showing when they are safely balanced, or at risk.
Each company's chart tracks its financial health over time, typically across five years. The line's height shows financial strength; its direction shows improvement or decline.
Our purpose
To simplify complex financial data into a clear, visual format that helps identify opportunity and risk at a glance.
The Plimsoll model does not replace full financial due diligence — it acts as a clear signal, telling you where to look, and often why a company is performing the way it is.
Four jobs the chart does well
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Benchmark
Position your own firm against its nearest competitors on a single comparable scale.
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Identify improvers
Spot which companies are getting stronger — and study what's driving their success.
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Find acquisitions
Surface targets where the chart is changing the most — moments of value or vulnerability.
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Track progress
Follow specific firms over time to see how their overall financial health changes year-on-year.
Five line shapes — five different stories
In general, a rising or high line signals improving or strong financial health; a low or falling line signals decline or weakness. These are the five shapes you'll see most often.
- Rising lineStrength improving · profits growing, strong balance sheet
- Falling lineWeakening position · profits falling, debt increasing
- Flat & highConsistently strong · well-managed, sustainable
- Flat & lowConsistently weak · underfunded, limited profit
- Sharp rise or fallMajor change · new investment, acquisition, or shock
The eight patterns to know
The scales are fixed, so any company's chart can be compared with any other. Each shape carries a different story — and a different risk.
A line falling over more than 1 year
Serious change in financial health. A decline over four years suggests increasing dependence on lenders or sustained falling profitability.
A line rising over more than 1 year
Improving financial strength year on year. A sustained rise suggests strategy is paying off.
A line falling sharply in the latest year
A previously strong company that's just declined — look for a dip in profitability or a change in funding.
A line rising sharply in the latest year
Previously low chart that's just improved — a sharp rise can suggest investment paying off or a change in profitability.
A line high and level
High and stable — great financial-management stability. Often debt-free, funded entirely by shareholders' funds.
A line low and level
Low yet stable — the business is being funded by outside capital, and may have fundamentally low profitability.
A line below the scale
Heavy dependence on a parent company or outside finance. Assess the parent company's health alongside.
A line above the scale
Suggests significant cash reserves, or profitability well ahead of the rest of the market.
The five ratios behind every load line
The overall Plimsoll line is the equally-weighted combined average of these five ratios. The trend on each one tells you the momentum behind the headline.
The company's overall financial health. Higher = stronger. Both the height and the angle of change matter.
Why it’s importantAny change in this chart should send you to the five underlying ratios for the cause. A 30% fall over two years is considered a serious decline and should trigger a review.
Pre-tax return on investment — how efficiently the firm turns capital into profit.
Why it’s importantA declining or low line points to over-investment, higher costs, or continuous over-trading. Firms often resort to overtrading to fix it.
How balanced the company is between assets and liabilities — its ability to pay its way without selling assets.
Why it’s importantLong-term debt is included here on purpose: when a company is failing, it doesn't matter whether the debt is long or short — the total is what matters.
How well trade creditors and unsecured creditors are covered — short-term exposure.
Why it’s importantBanks are usually better-informed than trade creditors. A falling or low line shows the company is becoming dependent on cheap trade credit — which can creep up unnoticed.
Total sales return on investment — how efficiently the firm turns capital into sales.
Why it’s importantA declining line points to too much capital tied up in stock or cash, or too high a capital base for the level of sales — the classic over-investment trap.
How equity is balanced — how much of the company is owned by shareholders versus funded externally.
Why it’s importantA fall or low line means the firm is dependent on outside decision-makers — an investor, parent company, or lender — for its survival and continued support.
A clear signal — not a final verdict
Want a guided walkthrough of the analysis?
It's often most useful to talk through your Plimsoll Chart with someone who reads them every day. Drop us an email and we'll book a 30-minute Teams call at a time that suits you.
Email a.gomer@plimsoll.co.uk