Title: WORKING CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
1 WORKING CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
2AGENDA
-
- Working Capital, Definition
- Float and Value Dating
- Payment and Collection Instruments
- Short-Term Investing
- Short-Term Borrowing
3Working Capital
- Working Capital All the items in the short term
part of the balance sheet - e.g. cash, short term debt, investments,
inventory, debtors (receivables), payables
(creditors) etc - Net Working Capital is the difference between
Current Assets and Current Liabilities - Cash Management, Liquidity Management
- Interconnected terms.
4CORPORATE DEFINITION OF CASH MANAGEMENT
- The effective planning, monitoring and management
of liquid / near liquid resources including - Day-to-day cash control
- Money at the bank
- Receipts
- Payments
- S-T investments and borrowings
5CASH MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENT
BANKERS PERSPECTIVE
6BANK DEFINITION OF CASH MANAGEMENT
- The effective planning, monitoring and management
of liquid / near liquid resources including - Provision of bank accounts
- Deposit / withdrawal facilities
- Provision of information regarding bank accounts
and positions - Money transfers and collection services
- Investment facilities
- Financing facilities
- Pooling and netting
7BENEFITS OF GOOD CASH MANAGEMENT
- Control of financial risk
- Opportunity for profit
- Strengthened balance sheet
- Increased customer, supplier, and shareholder
confidence
8WORKING CAPITAL
Managing Liquidity
Source Essentials of Managing Corporate Cash
9DEFINITION OF LIQUIDITY
- Having sufficient funds available to meet all
foreseen and unforeseen obligations -
- Liquidity has costs
- Cash is unproductive
- Spread between borrowing and deposit rates and
between long and short term rates
10NEED FOR LIQUIDITY
- Day to day transactions
- Precautionary balances
- Compensating balances
- Obtaining discounts
- Acid tests
- Favourable opportunities
- Overall avoiding bankruptcy!
-
11THE CASH GENERATOR / ABSORBER
40
Stock
20
80
Purchases
Sales
20
PROFIT?
CASH BALANCE?
12Operating Cycle
- Purchase Resources Pay
Sell on Credit Receive Cash - Inventory Conversion
Receivables Conversion - Payables Period
Cash Conversion Cycle -
Operating Cycle - FromFundamentals of Contemporary Financial
Management, 2nd ed - , by Moyer, McGuigan and Rao
13The Various Cycles
- Inventory Conversion
- Inventory x 365
- Cost of Goods Sold
- Payables Conversion
- Payables/Creditors x 365
- Cost of Goods Sold
- Receivables Conversion
- Receivables/Debtors x 365
- Turnover
14Balance SheetShort Term Items
- Current assets
- Inventories
1,910 1,903 - Trade and other receivables
1,713 1,625 - Current tax assets
13 - - Other financial assets
43 78 - Cash and short term assets
733 917 -
4,412 4,523 - Current liabilities
- Short term borrowings
355 555 - Trade and other payables
1,690 1,735 - Current tax liabilities
121 44 - Other financial liabilities
119 13 - Short term provisions
82 130 -
1,367 2,477 - Turnover 9,577
- Cost of goods sold 8,943
-
15Operating Cycle
- Purchase Resources Pay
Sell on Credit Receive Cash - Inventory Conversion 78 days
Receivables Conversion -
65 days - Payables Period
Cash Conversion Cycle - 69 days
74 days -
Operating Cycle -
143 -
16Cash Conversion
- We need to consider control in all areas of
working capital to maximise return, reduce cost. - Some areas are not controlled by the Finance
Function Stock/inventory - Some areas have shared control payables and
receivables - Some areas are controlled by the Finance
Function short term borrowing and investment
17Float
- Any delay in the process of converting materials
and labour to receipt of payment involves cost,
float cost. - Similarly, any delay in making payments will also
give rise to float but this time to our advantage - What is float?
18FLOAT
- Definition of bank float
- The time lost between a payor making a payment
and a beneficiary receiving value - Cost of Float
- principle amount due x no of days x cost of funds
- 360 or 365
-
19WHY DOES FLOAT OCCUR?
- Deliberately
- Inefficiency
- Logistical situations
- Compensation mechanism
20STAGES OF FLOAT
1. Order received
Production float
2. Goods dispatched
System float
3. Invoice issued
Credit period
4. Payment due
Customer float
5. Payment made
Postal float
6. Payment received
System float
7. Payment banked
Bank float
8. Funds available
Concentration float
9. Funds to correct account
Information float
10. Advice of availability
21Controlling Float
- We need to look at controlling / influencing
float in three areas - Ourselves
- Our Customers
- Our Banks
22HOW TO REDUCE/CONTROL FLOAT
- Your Own Actions
- Change own systems
- Educate customers
- Include costs in prices
- Negotiate with bank
23RECEIVABLES AND PAYABLES MANAGEMENT
- Good receivables and payables management aids in
- Cash flow forecasting
- Long-term funding and investment decisions
- Reduced risk of bad debts
- Stronger liquidity
- Stronger balance sheet ratios
24RECEIVABLES IMPACT
- Important because of costs arising from
- Float
- Bad debts
- Management time
- Legal fees
- And
- Impact on analysts and creditors
25RECEIVABLES MANAGEMENT 1
- Clear instructions
- Method of payment
- Documentation
- Account structures
- Terms of Trade
26Controlling Float
- Payment Methods
- Payment methods are important because of
- - Cost
- - Risk
- - Value Dating
- - Finality
27INTERNATIONAL TRADE PAYMENTS
- Terms of trade
- Settlement
- Open account
- Clean collection
- Documentary collection
- Against payment
- Against acceptance
- Revocable documentary letter of credit
- Irrevocable documentary letter of credit
- Unconfirmed
- Confirmed
- Advance payment
28RECEIVABLES MANAGEMENT 2
- Penalties
- Post dated cheques
- Legal process
- Internal process
- Stop supply
- But do not forget Relationship
29VALUE DATING
- Forward Value Dating
- The time between a bank being notified of a
transaction in favor of a customer and the
customer receiving future value for the item - Back Value Dating
- The time between a bank being notified of a
transaction to the customers account and the
item being valued on a date prior to the date of
the transaction
30FINALITY
- The time after which a payment is considered to
become irrevocable and cannot be returned without
the permission of beneficiary account holder.
31DOMESTIC PAYMENT INSTRUMENTS
- Paper-based
- Cash
- Cheques
- Bank transfers or giros
- Postal giros
- Bills of exchange
- Promissory notes
- Bankers drafts
- Search for APACS on the internet
32Method of PaymentCheque Clearing, UK
33DOMESTIC PAYMENT INSTRUMENTS
- Electronic
- Funds transfer
- Urgent wires
- Standard EFT
- Automated clearing house payments
- Standing order
- Direct Debit
- Electronic bills of exchange
- Plastic (credit, charge, cheque guarantee, cash
dispenser, debit) - Financial EDI
- Look up Voca on the internet, used to be BACS
34CROSS-BORDER PAYMENTS
- Paper-based
- Foreign currency cheques
- Bankers drafts
- Giros (Credit transfer)
- Documentary collections
- Cheque negotiations
35CROSS-BORDER PAYMENTS
- Electronic
- Using correspondent banks
- Using a global or pan-regional bank
- Cross-border systems
- TARGET
- EBA EURO 1
- EBA Step 1
- CHAPS euro (NewCHAPS)
- Credit cards
- Direct debits
36Clearing House Automated Transfer System
37Controlling Float
- Bank Services
- Lockbox
- Intervention accounts
- Remote disbursement
- Controlled disbursement
- Direct collections
- Efficient collections structure
38PAYABLES
- Critical questions
- What is due?
- When is it due?
- Where should the payment be sent?
- How should the payment be sent?
- Are there funds to cover the payment?
- Is the payment properly authorized?
39PAYABLES MANAGEMENT
- The flip side of the coin
- So
- Hang on to it
- Consider float versus control
- Account structures
- Discounts
- But do not forget Relationship
40SHORT-TERM INVESTING
- The Decision Process
- How much do I have to invest per currency?
- How long do I have to invest it?
- Where are the funds located?
- What is my appetite for risk?
41INVESTMENT GUIDELINES
- What are the companys policies regarding
- Currency exposure and hedging
- Banks used and limits
- Investment instruments and limits
- Use of automated sweep accounts
- Bank / investment ratings
42FACTORS IN CHOOSING INVESTMENTS
- The need to make an adequate return
- The need to take into account areas of risk
- Credit risk
- Interest rate risk
- Capital risk
- Market risk
- The need to consider liquidity
43HOW RATES ARE QUOTED
- At a discount Instrument issued at less than
100 - Coupon Specific interest payments made at
specific times - Yield to redemption Interest payments over the
lifetime of the instrument and principal repaid
may be greater or less than 100
44SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
- Commercial paper (CP)
- Bankers acceptances (BAs)
- Repurchase agreements
- Certificates of deposit (CDs)
- Money market funds
- Treasury instruments (bills, notes, bonds)
45SHORT-TERM BORROWING
- The Decision Process
- How much needs to be financed and in what
currency? - How long does the deficit need to be financed?
- Where does it need it be financed?
- What is the maximum level of funding needed?
46FACTORS AFFECTING BORROWING
- These factors affect both amount available and
cost - Financial strength of the company
- Key covenants
- Industry
- Available guarantee or security
- Companys ability to repay on time from banks
perspective
47SHORT-TERM FUNDING INSTRUMENTS
- Internal short-term funding
- Least expensive source of funding
- Cross-border and cross-currency intra-group
financing can be difficult - External short-term funding
- Can act as a built-in hedge if sourced in the
same currency - Can be inexpensive to borrow local currency in
the currency center
48FACTORS IN CHOOSING FUNDING INSTRUMENTS
- All-in borrowing cost
- Security required
- Terms conditions
- Tax balance sheet aspects
49INVESTMENT DECISION PROCESS
50THE FINANCING DECISION PROCESS
Monitor cash flow forecasts
annually / quarterly / monthly / weekly / daily
Identify deficits
Determine
Amount / currency
Duration / location
FINANCING DECISION
Financing action
Documentation
Recording / monitoring / reporting
Liquidation
51U.S. SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
- Commercial paper (CP)
- Bankers acceptances (BAs)
- Repurchase agreements
- Certificates of deposit (CDs)
- US Treasury instruments (bills, notes, bonds
STRIPS)
52INTERNATIONAL SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
- Bankers Acceptances
- Commercial paper
- Euro
- GBP
- Treasury bills
- Certificates of deposit
- GBP
- Eurodollar
53BILLS OF EXCHANGE
- Foreign currency
- Commercial
- GBP
- Eligible
- Ineligible
- Trade bills
54FACTORS IN CHOOSING FUNDING
- Are all-in borrowing costs being offered?
- Does the bank require security?
- What are the terms and conditions?
- Is interest able to be offset on tax returns?
55OTHER SOURCES OF FUNDING
- Factoring
- Invoice discounting
- Trade bills
- Acceptance credits