Table of Contents

Fixed Charge

A Fixed Charge is a recurring, contractual financial obligation that a company must pay, regardless of its sales volume or profitability. Think of it like your personal monthly rent or mortgage payment—it’s due every month, rain or shine, whether you got a big bonus or not. For a business, these are the non-negotiable costs baked into its operations. They typically include interest payments on Debt, lease payments for property and equipment, and sometimes even Preferred Stock dividends. Unlike Variable Costs (like raw materials), which go up and down with production, fixed charges are a constant, predictable drain on a company's cash. Understanding a company's fixed charges is crucial because they reveal its financial rigidity. A heavy burden of fixed charges can sink a company during tough times, while a light load provides flexibility and resilience.

What Exactly Are Fixed Charges?

Fixed charges are the financial bedrock of a company's cost structure. They are the promises a company has made that must be kept to stay in business. The most common examples include:

It's important to distinguish these from costs that might seem fixed but aren't, like salaries. While a company tries to maintain its workforce, salaries are not a contractual obligation in the same way as a debt payment and can be cut during severe downturns.

Why Fixed Charges Matter to a Value Investor

For a value investor, analyzing fixed charges isn't just an accounting exercise; it's a fundamental risk assessment. High fixed charges create a powerful, but dangerous, financial phenomenon.

The Double-Edged Sword of Leverage

High fixed charges create what's known as Operating Leverage. Here's how it works:

A value investor, ever cautious and focused on capital preservation, views high leverage with suspicion. It reduces a company's Margin of Safety and makes it vulnerable to economic recessions or industry-specific downturns. A business with low fixed charges might not be as exciting during a boom, but it's far more likely to survive a bust.

The Ultimate Safety Check: The Ratio

So, how do you measure if a company's fixed charges are manageable? You use the Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio (FCCR). This ratio is a more robust health indicator than the simpler Interest Coverage Ratio because it includes other major fixed obligations, like lease payments. The formula looks like this: FCCR = (Earnings Before Interest and Taxes + Lease Payments) / (Interest Payments + Lease Payments)

A higher ratio is always better. A ratio below 1.5x should be a major red flag, as it suggests the company is cutting it very close and has little room for error. A healthy, conservative company will often have a ratio of 3x or higher, indicating it earns enough to cover its mandatory payments three times over.

A Tale of Two Companies

Imagine two T-shirt companies, each with $1 million in revenue.

Now, a mild recession hits, and revenue for both companies drops by 30% to $700,000.

This simple story shows how a high fixed charge structure creates fragility.

The Bottom Line

Fixed charges are a measure of a company's financial rigidity. They are not inherently evil—investing for growth often requires taking on debt or leases. However, for a value investor, a company's ability to comfortably cover these charges, with plenty of room to spare, is non-negotiable. Before you invest, always dig into the financial statements, identify the major fixed charges, and calculate the Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio. It’s one of the most effective tools for separating resilient, durable businesses from fragile ones that might shatter at the first sign of trouble.