LOS 10
Management of Short-Term Liabilities
Learning Outcome Statement (LOS)
understand why we need to use short-term financing
why use short-term financing identify the sources of short-term
financing understand cash budgeting summary and conclusion
Introduction
Accounts payable is the Cinderella of the working capital world.
While her more glamorous sister functions demand the bulk of a company’s time and attention, accounts payable often lacks the care and attention it deserves.
That’s a pity - because this Cinderella can account for about 60 percent of a company’s turnover. And when she is dressed up to go to the ball, the results are immediate and can be simply stunning.
Introduction
A payable balance is the result of a company’s need or desire to buy a service, a product, or a commodity.
Purchases can be divided into direct purchases (goods and raw materials) or indirect purchases (pens, stationery, and building maintenance and infrastructure costs, for example).
A/P Management – Why Need the Attention?
Even a small improvement to the accounts payable element of working capital and the cost of purchases can deliver quick results to the bottom line, often well out of proportion to the amounts involved. These improvements can be broadly equivalent to a significant boost in a company’s sales.
For a company facing the reality of static or declining sales, this can spell the difference between collapse and survival, by buying the time needed for rethinking and restructuring.
For a company managing growth, the return will be even healthier key figures than would otherwise be the case.
A/P Management – Why Need the Attention?
As a broad rule of thumb, we would expect the cost of direct purchases to fall by 3 to 5 percent, meaning that for every $1 billion of purchases, $30–$50 million would feed straight through to the bottom line.
A company with a gross margin of 15 percent would need to increase sales by $500 million to generate that much extra net cash.
An increase in creditor days by 15 to 30 percent is also often achieved, giving a further boost to working capital.
Objectives of Current Liabilities
The structure of a firm’s current liabilities should achieve two goals, such as
It should provide the necessary amounts of short-term financing
It should be in keeping with the target level of aggregate liquidity.
The challenge in the management of current liabilities is to achieve these goals at a minimum cost.
The Balance-Sheet Model of the Firm
Current Assets
Fixed Assets
1 Tangible
2 IntangibleShareholders’
Equity
Current Liabilities
Long-Term Debt
What long-term investments should the firm engage in?
The Capital Budgeting Decision
The Balance-Sheet Model of the Firm
How can the firm raise the money for the required investments?
The Capital Structure Decision
Current Assets
Fixed Assets
1 Tangible
2 IntangibleShareholders’
Equity
Current Liabilities
Long-Term Debt
The Balance-Sheet Model of the Firm
How much short-term cash flow does a company need to pay its bills?
The Net Working Capital Investment Decision
Net Working Capital
Current Assets
Fixed Assets
1 Tangible
2 IntangibleShareholders’
Equity
Current Liabilities
Long-Term Debt
Types of Short-Term Financing
Short-term financing is a liability that originally scheduled for repayment within one year.
Short-term financing can be classified as temporary short-term financing and permanent short-term financing.
Temporary short-term financing is used to provide funds for transient cash flow shortages, such as those caused by seasonality in sales. When it is cheaper to borrow funds to cover such deficits than to keep a reserve of funds against them, temporary borrowings are attractive to the firm.
Permanent short-term financing are used by firms on a continuing basis and are refinanced with new short-term debt as they mature.
Some Aspects of Short-Term Financial Policy
There are two elements of the policy that a firm adopts for short-term finance.
The size of the firm’s investment in current assets - usually measured relative to the firm’s level of total operating revenues.
Flexible Restrictive
Alternative financing policies for current assets - usually measured as the proportion of short-term debt to long-term debt.
Flexible Restrictive
The Size of the Investment in Current Assets
A flexible short-term finance policy would maintain a high ratio of current assets to sales. Keeping large cash balances and investments in
marketable securities. Large investments in inventory. Liberal credit terms.
A restrictive short-term finance policy would maintain a low ratio of current assets to sales. Keeping low cash balances, no investment in
marketable securities. Making small investments in inventory. Allowing no credit sales (thus no accounts
receivable).
Carrying Costs and Shortage Costs
$
Investment in Current Assets ($)
Shortage costs
Carrying costs
Total costs of holding current assets
CA*
Minimum point
Appropriate Flexible Policy
$
Investment in Current Assets ($)
Shortage costs
Carrying costs
Total costs of holding current assets
CA*
Minimum point
When a Restrictive Policy is Appropriate?
$
Investment in Current Assets ($)
Shortage costs
Carrying costs
Total costs of holding current assets
CA*
Minimum point
Alternative Financing Policies for Current Assets
A flexible short-term financing policy means low proportion of short-term debt relative to long-term financing.
A restrictive short-term financing policy means high proportion of short-term debt relative to long-term financing.
In an ideal world, short-term assets are always financed with short-term debt and long-term assets are always financed with long-term debt.
In this world, net working capital is always zero.
Financing Policy for an Idealized Economy
Long-term debt plus common stock
$
Time0 1 2 3 4 5
Current assets = Short-term debt
Fixed assets: a growing firm
Grain elevator operators buy crops after harvest, store them, and sell them during the year. Inventory is financed with short-term debt. Net working capital is always zero.
Alternative Asset-Financing Strategies
$
Time
Long Term Financing
Short Term
Financing
Total Asset Requiremen
t $
Time
Long Term Financing
Marketable
Securities
Total Asset Requireme
nt
Why Use Short-Term Financing?
There are at least three reasons for the use of permanent short-term financing, such as
There are minimum amounts of accounts payable and of accruals. It is uneconomical for the firm to reduce short-term debt below those levels.
As long as the yield curve is upsloping, the expected interest expense of short-term debt is less than that on long-term debt, though the use of short-term debt is riskier.
Financing with permanent short-term debt allows the firm substantial flexibility in its package of permanent financing.
Sources of Short-Term Financing
Nine common sources of short-term financing are:
Commercial paper Bankers’ acceptance Accounts payable Accruals Unsecured credit line borrowings Unsecured notes and term loan borrowings Secured borrowings with marketable securities as
collateral Secured borrowings with accounts receivable as
collateral Secured borrowings with inventory as collateral
The first six of these are unsecured borrowings, while the last three involves secured transactions.
Characteristics of Sources of Short-Term Financing
Sources Users Maturity
Commercial paper
Large firms and small firms with bank guarantee
270 days; most common is 30 days
Bankers’ acceptance
Firms importing goods 30-180 days; most common 90 days
Accounts payable
Any purchaser of goods or services
30 days most common
Accruals Firms who may defer labor, taxes etc.
Depends on specific accruals
Unsecured credit line
Firms with strong financial position
Can be drawn down or paid off any time
Unsecured short-term notes
Firms with strong financial position
Most common 90 days
Characteristics of Sources of Short-Term Financing
Sources Users Maturity
Secured borrowing using marketable securities
Firms holding marketable securities
Typically of very short maturities
Secured borrowings using accounts receivable
Firms with liquid and substantial accounts receivable
Loans are due when invoices are paid
Secured borrowings using inventory
Firms with liquid and substantial inventory
Loans are made when inventory is acquired and are due when inventory is used
Cash Budgeting
A cash budget is a primary tool of short-run financial planning.
The idea is simple: Record the estimates of cash receipts and disbursements.
Cash Receipts Arise from sales, but we need to estimate when we
actually collect.
Cash Outflow Payments of Accounts Payable Wages, Taxes, and other Expenses Capital Expenditures Long-Term Financial Planning
Cash Budgeting
The cash balance tells the manager what borrowing is required or what lending will be possible in the short run.
The Short-Term Financial Plan
The most common way to finance a temporary cash deficit to arrange a short-term loan.
Unsecured Loans Line of credit down at the bank
Secured Loans Accounts receivable financing can be either assigned
or factored. Inventory loans use inventory as collateral.
Other Sources Banker’s acceptances Commercial paper.
Summary & Conclusions
This chapter introduces the management of short-term finance.
We examine the short-term uses and sources of cash as they appear on the firm’s financial statements.
We see how current assets and current liabilities arise in the short-term operating activities and the cash cycle of the firm.
From an accounting perspective, short-term finance involves net working capital.
Summary & Conclusions
Managing short-term cash flows involves the minimization of costs.
The two major costs are: Carrying costs - the interest and related costs
incurred by overinvesting in short-term assets such as cash
Shortage costs - the cost of running out of short-term assets.
The objective of managing short-term finance and short-term financial planning is to find the optimal tradeoff between these two costs.
Summary & Conclusions
In an ideal economy, the firm could perfectly predict its short-term uses and sources of cash and net working capital could be kept at zero.
In the real world, net working capital provides a buffer that lets the firm meet its ongoing obligations.
The financial manager seeks the optimal level of each of the current assets.
The financial manager can use the cash budget to identify short-term financial needs.
The cash budget tells the manager what borrowing is required or what lending will be possible in the short run.