Working Capital Loans
When the consumer market requires your
business to make changes such as buy or upgrade equipment or
refurbish your establishment, you may consider a working
capital loan.
Although your business may need the working capital, the
prospect of making a monthly loan payment may seem
frustrating. Making a lump sum payment to a bank each month
regardless of whether your business is having a great month
or when you have entered the slow season can be burdensome.
1st Merchant Funding offers are not loan products. Instead
we provide working capital in a unique way that allows your
business to keep more of the capital it needs on hand. You
can choose to use our products once, or build a lasting
renewal relationship with us, making receiving the working
capital when you need it even easier.
What Is Working Capital?
Working capital refers to the cash a business requires for
day-to day operations, or, more specifically, for financing
the conversion of raw materials into finished goods, which
the company sells for payment. Among the most important
items of working capital are levels of inventory, accounts
receivable, and accounts payable. Analysts look at these
items for signs of a company's efficiency and financial
strength.
The better a company manages its working capital, the less
the company needs to borrow. Even companies with cash
surpluses need to manage working capital to ensure that
those surpluses are invested in ways that will generate
suitable returns for investors.
Not All Companies Are the Same. Some companies are
inherently better placed than others. Insurance companies,
for instance, receive premium payments up front before
having to make any payments; however, insurance companies do
have unpredictable outgoings as claims come in.
Normally a big retailer like Wal-Mart has little to worry
about when it comes to accounts receivable: customers pay
for goods on the spot. Inventories represent the biggest
problem for retailers, who must perform rigorous inventory
forecasting or they risk being out of business in a short
time.
Timing and lumpiness of payments can pose serious troubles.
Manufacturing companies, for example, incur substantial
up-front costs for materials and labor before receiving
payment. Much of the time they eat more cash than they
generate.
Evaluating Companies
Investors should favor companies that place emphasis on
supply-chain management to ensure that trade terms are
optimized. Days-sales outstanding, or DSO for short, is a
good indication of working capital management practices. DSO
provides a rough guide to the number of days that a company
takes to collect payment after making a sale. Here is the
simple formula: Receivables/ annual sales/365 days.
Rising DSO is sign of trouble since it shows that a company
is taking longer to collect its payments. It suggests that
the company is not going to have enough cash to fund
short-term obligations because the cash cycle is
lengthening. A spike in DSO is even more worrisome,
especially for companies that are already low on cash.
The inventory turnover ratio offers another good instrument
for assessing the effectiveness of WCM. The inventory ratio
shows how fast/often companies are able to get their goods
completely off the shelves. The inventory ratio looks like
this: Cost of goods sold (COGS)/Inventory.
Broadly speaking, a high inventory turnover ratio is good
for business. Products that sit on the shelf are not making
money. Granted, an increase in the ratio can be a positive
sign, indicating that management, expecting sales to
increase, is building up inventory ahead of time.
For investors, a company's inventory turnover ratio is best
seen in light of its competitors. In a given sector where,
say, it is normal for a company to completely sell out and
re-stock six times a year, a company that achieves a
turnover ratio of four is an underperformer. |