Is HyreCar Inc’s (NASDAQ:HYRE) Balance Sheet Strong Enough To Weather A Storm?

HyreCar Inc (NASDAQ:HYRE), which has zero-debt on its balance sheet, can maximize capital returns by increasing debt due to its lower cost of capital. However, the trade-off is HYRE will have to follow strict debt obligations which will reduce its financial flexibility. While zero-debt makes the due diligence for potential investors less nerve-racking, it poses a new question: how should they assess the financial strength of such companies? I will go over a basic overview of the stock’s financial health, which I believe provides a ballpark estimate of their financial health status.

See our latest analysis for HyreCar

Is HYRE right in choosing financial flexibility over lower cost of capital?

Debt capital generally has lower cost of capital compared to equity funding. Though, the trade-offs are that lenders require stricter capital management requirements, in addition to having a higher claim on company assets relative to shareholders. The lack of debt on HYRE’s balance sheet may be because it does not have access to cheap capital, or it may believe this trade-off is not worth it. Choosing financial flexibility over capital returns make sense if HYRE is a high-growth company. HYRE’s revenue growth over the past year was an impressively high triple-digit rate, therefore the company’s decision to choose financial flexibility is justified as it may need headroom to borrow in the future to sustain high growth.

NasdaqCM:HYRE Historical Debt November 22nd 18
NasdaqCM:HYRE Historical Debt November 22nd 18

Does HYRE’s liquid assets cover its short-term commitments?

Given zero long-term debt on its balance sheet, HyreCar has no solvency issues, which is used to describe the company’s ability to meet its long-term obligations. But another important aspect of financial health is liquidity: the company’s ability to meet short-term obligations, including payments to suppliers and employees. At the current liabilities level of US$1.2m, it appears that the company has been able to meet these obligations given the level of current assets of US$9.0m, with a current ratio of 7.2x. Having said that, many consider a ratio above 3x to be high.

Next Steps:

Having no debt on the books means HYRE has more financial freedom to keep growing at its current fast rate. This may mean this is an optimal capital structure for the business, given that it is also meeting its short-term commitment. Moving forward, HYRE’s financial situation may change. Keep in mind I haven’t considered other factors such as how HYRE has been performing in the past. I recommend you continue to research HyreCar to get a better picture of the stock by looking at:

  1. Historical Performance: What has HYRE’s returns been like over the past? Go into more detail in the past track record analysis and take a look at the free visual representations of our analysis for more clarity.

  2. Other High-Performing Stocks: Are there other stocks that provide better prospects with proven track records? Explore our free list of these great stocks here.

To help readers see past the short term volatility of the financial market, we aim to bring you a long-term focused research analysis purely driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis does not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements.

The author is an independent contributor and at the time of publication had no position in the stocks mentioned. For errors that warrant correction please contact the editor at editorial-team@simplywallst.com.

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