Showing posts with label current asset. Show all posts
Showing posts with label current asset. Show all posts

Tuesday 7 July 2009

How changes in Working Capital affect Cash

How changes in Current Liabilities affect cash

Increase in accounts payable (a bigger liability) generates cash.
  • Suppose the company you're watching has a $45 million increase in cash from accounts payable.
  • There is $45 million in cash floating around in the business that didn't show up in net income.
  • Let's suppose that one large item was purchased for $45 million. An accounting expense was incurred when the payable was created, but no cash has yet been used to pay the bill. It's still in the bank.
  • So while the expense was incurred, reducing earnings, the cash wasn't paid and, at least for now, there's more cash in the business.


Increase in current liabilities provide cash.

Decrease in current liabilities use cash.


How changes in Current Assets affect cash

In different financial statements, it is common to see account receivable, inventories and accounts payables either providing or using cash.

Increases in current assets (other than cash) use cash.

Decreases in current assets (as in a net decrease in inventory) provide cash.

Saturday 25 April 2009

Quality check to weed out company with an insatiable demand for capital.

Quality check to weed out company with an insatiable demand for capital.

Benjamin Graham and followers placed great emphasis on financial strength, liquidity, debt coverage and so on. It was the tune of the times.

Credit analysis today continue to check all manner of coverage (e.g. interest coverage) and debt ratios, but for most companies reporting a profit, it maybe overkill.

Here are a few checks to provide a margin of safety and a further test of whether the company has an insatiable demand for capital:

1. Are current assets (besides cash) rising faster than the business is growing?

This ties to the asset productivity and turnover measures but it is worth one last check to see whether a company is buying business by extending too much credit.

More receivables result from extending credit.

Losing channel structure and supply chain battles (customers and distributors won't carry inventory; suppliers are making them carry more inventory) result in increased inventories.

In a soft construction environment, distributors and retailers like Home Depot and Lowe's simply aren't taking as much inventory, pushing it back up the supply chain. The main supplier's risk is greater capital requirements and expensive impairments downstream.

2. Is debt growing faster than the business growth?

Over a sustained period, debt rising faster than business growth is a problem.

If the owners won't kick in to grow the business, and if retained earnings aren't sufficient to meet growth, what does that tell you? The business is forced to seek capital.

3. Repeated trips to the financial markets?

If the business continually has to approach the capital markets (other than in startup phases), that again is a sign that internally generated earnings and cash flows are not sufficient.

Once in a while it is okay, but again one is looking to weed out chronic capital consumers.