Financial Statement Data
Model Assumptions
- SGR assumes constant ROE and constant payout ratio
- SGR assumes firm raises new debt to maintain its current D/E ratio
- IGR assumes no external financing — growth from retained earnings only
- Uses the simple-form SGR and a commonly-used IGR formulation; the IGR formula specifically uses the end-of-period convention
- Uses user-entered balance-sheet figures as-is (not period-average balances)
- Dividends should be common dividends for the same fiscal period as net income
- Point-in-time calculation — actual growth may differ from sustainable rate
Growth Rate Results
DuPont Decomposition (3-Factor)
Interpretation Guide
| Growth Scenario | Condition | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Below IGR | Growth < IGR | Self-funded — excess cash available |
| Between IGR & SGR | IGR < Growth < SGR | Needs debt but maintains D/E ratio |
| Above SGR | Growth > SGR | Requires new equity or higher leverage |
Understanding Sustainable Growth
What Is the Sustainable Growth Rate?
The sustainable growth rate (SGR) is the maximum rate at which a company can grow its sales, earnings, and dividends while maintaining its current capital structure (debt-to-equity ratio) without issuing new equity. It is calculated as:
Where Retention = 1 − (Dividends / Net Income)
SGR vs Internal Growth Rate
Sustainable Growth Rate
SGR = ROE × Retention
Allows new debt to maintain the current D/E ratio. Represents a higher growth ceiling for leveraged firms.
Internal Growth Rate
IGR = (ROA × b) / (1 − ROA × b)
No external financing at all. Growth funded entirely from retained earnings. More conservative estimate.
The DuPont Connection
The 3-factor DuPont decomposition breaks ROE into its component drivers:
= (NI/Revenue) × (Revenue/Assets) × (Assets/Equity)
This decomposition reveals whether a company's ROE is driven by profitability, efficiency, or leverage — each with different implications for sustainable growth.
Practical Applications
- Financial planning: Determine if projected growth requires external financing. See the Pro Forma Financial Modeling guide.
- Dividend policy: Understand the trade-off between payouts and growth capacity. Try the Payout Ratio Calculator.
- Credit analysis: Assess whether a borrower's growth plans are self-funding. See Financial Ratio Analysis.
- Valuation: Use SGR as a terminal growth rate bound in DCF models
- Working capital: Understand how fast-growing firms consume cash. Try the Cash Conversion Cycle Calculator.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and uses simplified assumptions. The sustainable growth rate is a theoretical maximum, not a forecast. Actual growth depends on market conditions, competitive dynamics, and management decisions. This tool should not be used as the sole basis for investment or financing decisions.