Posts Tagged ‘Cash’

Personal Finance: Easy and Cheap Cash to Get you Off the Hook

Sometimes need crop up and you may not have the required bucks in your pocket. This makes you stumble at times but this should not stop your go and you can take the support of loans to tackle this cash flow gap. However, there are schemes that are really well off in this regard. This is one, the Personal Finance.

This loan scheme gets you into the task of taking loans and there is a cash advance here for everyone who seeks it. You can take the cash to meet any of your personal needs. You may be facing debts, may be in home improvement or may be in business needs. For these serious needs, you can easily take the bucks from this source. Yet, you can take the money for other reasons like a car buying or a holiday trip too.

The scheme is advanced in both the regular formats, secured and unsecured and there is open door for the bad credit holders too. However, the bad credit holders need to pay a slightly hiked interest rate here, yet which remains within modest limits. Anyway, secured types give you the loans at cheap rates and with flexible terms because of the collateral assurance attached and the benefit of unsecured ones lies with their availability without collateral.

To find personal finance with better and paced, one should go online where applying is free of cost and you need to apply through only a simple as well as small application form which takes barely 2-3 minutes to be filled up. Also , the large number of lenders flocked online let find your loans at your convenient rates since there is a lot of options there.

Personal finance allows you to have cheap rate loans and they are again available for all and this makes its turn superb. It makes your financial future a more secured one.

Posted by on March 19th, 2011 Comments Off

Personal Finance: Easy and Cheap Cash to Get you Off the Hook

Sometimes need crop up and you may not have the required bucks in your pocket. This makes you stumble at times but this should not stop your go and you can take the support of loans to tackle this cash flow gap. However, there are schemes that are really well off in this regard. This is one, the Personal Finance.

This loan scheme gets you into the task of taking loans and there is a cash advance here for everyone who seeks it. You can take the cash to meet any of your personal needs. You may be facing debts, may be in home improvement or may be in business needs. For these serious needs, you can easily take the bucks from this source. Yet, you can take the money for other reasons like a car buying or a holiday trip too.

The scheme is advanced in both the regular formats, secured and unsecured and there is open door for the bad credit holders too. However, the bad credit holders need to pay a slightly hiked interest rate here, yet which remains within modest limits. Anyway, secured types give you the loans at cheap rates and with flexible terms because of the collateral assurance attached and the benefit of unsecured ones lies with their availability without collateral.

To find personal finance with better and paced, one should go online where applying is free of cost and you need to apply through only a simple as well as small application form which takes barely 2-3 minutes to be filled up. Also , the large number of lenders flocked online let find your loans at your convenient rates since there is a lot of options there.

Personal finance allows you to have cheap rate loans and they are again available for all and this makes its turn superb. It makes your financial future a more secured one.

Posted by on July 5th, 2010 Comments Off

Cash Management for Construction Companies

Cash management in this economic environment is crucial. Cash is the life-blood of any business. As the saying goes, “Cash is king”. With so many banks tightening credit standards due to what’s happening in the credit markets or within their own lending portfolios, it is crucial that businesses fully understand their cash needs IN ADVANCE and make adjustments to their operations to ensure that cash is available. Otherwise, companies may find themselves in a liquidity crisis –unable to meet payroll, pay suppliers, or pay subcontractors – which leads to bankruptcy or an operational shutdown.

Cash is NOT income. Let’s assume you enter into a $200,000 contract to provide interior fit-out services which will take you ~30 days to complete. According to the contract you submit invoices once per month (fairly standard in commercial construction) on the 25th and the general contractor has 30 days to pay you. You commence work on October 1. Before you begin, you buy materials such as drywall, nails and other supplies. You pay your tradespeople and foremen every 2 weeks so a check for their work is due on October 14. You buy materials and supplies for the last phase of work. You submit your invoice for $160,000 for work completed by the 25th, as per the contract. You pay your tradespeople again on Oct. 28. Assuming you have properly estimated the job and had no cost overruns, you have already spent IN CASH $140,000 – $160,000 on materials and supplies, equipment or equipment rental, personnel and miscellaneous.

Now you must wait until November 25 to receive payment. However, you only billed for 80% of the project, so you will only receive $160,000 maximum. You completed the job and bill for the remaining 20% or $40,000 by November 25th which you will receive by December 25. That assumes there is no retainage. With government contracts or bonded contracts that retainage is typically 10% or $20,000 in this example. If your contract calls for retainage, then you may have to wait several months before you receive the final $20,000.

So you spent $140,000 – $160,000 of your money in October: perhaps $30,000 the 1st week, $55,000 the 2nd week, $20,000 the 3rd week, and $55,000 the 4th and final week. You do not receive payment until November 25. You have a cumulative negative cash flow from this job of -$30,000 the 1st week, -$85,000 the end of the 2nd week, -$105,000 the end of the 3rd week, and -$160,000 the end of the 4th week. This negative cash flow or cash flow shortfall continues for four more weeks until you receive your first check of $160,000 for the project at the end of the 8th week. Upon payment your cash shortfall goes to 0. However, if you had a 10% retainage, you’d only receive a check for $144,000 and you’d still have a negative cash flow on the project of -$16,000. A little over four more weeks later you’d receive the second and last payment of $40,000 (again, assuming no retainage).

Yes, on this job you have a 20-30% operating profit. This looks great on paper. However, you also have negative cash flow for as long as 12-13 weeks or as little as 8 weeks and you are likely struggling financially trying to come up with cash to pay your people and your suppliers. We have all heard of subcontractors who went bust during a job and another one had to come in and take over. This unplanned cash flow shortage is the primary reason construction companies go out of business. If you do not have overlapping jobs with payments coming in that can cover the cash flow shortage, your business is hurting. You must engage in this type of budget planning and analysis before each and every job in order to plan your cash needs accordingly.

One way to mitigate the cash outflows is to get terms from your suppliers on your materials and supplies. If you can get 30-45 day terms, you can reduce both the amount of the negative cash flow and the length of time cash flow is negative. Another way is to use subcontractors instead of trade personnel and subject them to the same payment terms you are under with the contractor. Thus, instead of paying tradespeople every 2 weeks, you pay the subcontractor within 30 days of the submission of the invoice. In both these instances you align your cash outflows with your cash inflows as a way of negating or minimizing negative cash flow.

Of course, many subcontracts stipulate that a certain percentage of the work must be completed by your company which thereby places a defacto limit on the amount of work you can subcontract. In addition, quality and safety are often a concern when you utilize a high number of sub-subcontractors whose performance and sourcing you cannot directly control. Shoddy work leads to missed completion dates and additional expenditures tied to correcting mistakes. Consequently, over-dependence on sub-subcontractors can lead to cash flow shortages and other operational issues. This is yet another reason for the demise of some subcontractors while carrying out a contract.

A line of credit can help you weather cash shortages by leveraging working capital. Working capital is short-term assets – short-term liabilities or typically cash + account receivables – account payables – payroll payables. You can use your line of credit to pay payroll, rent equipment, or purchase supplies when you cannot get terms. If you do not have a line of credit with a bank, pursue one. Cultivate a strong relationship with a banker at Vice President (or equivalent) level and above. In these economic times with the credit market roiling and many banks dealing with issues in their own lending portfolios, strong relationships play an even larger role in obtaining credit than a year ago.

You can also pursue a line of credit with an accounts receivable financing or factoring firm. These charge much higher rates than banks but often are a good source of capital if you are growing significantly or garner a much larger contract than is typical for your company. Banks use your company’s three-year historical performance to provide credit lines so large increases in revenue over a short period often do not translate into a credit line increase for a few quarters. A receivables financing firm will provide a line based on your historical financials and the credit-worthiness of your customer. Unfortunately, since construction contracts and the attendant receivables often have the retainage provision, many receivables financing firms do not provide credit lines to construction companies. When they do, it is often at higher interest rates to compensate for the higher risk. Rates can be as high as 4-6% per month – assuming a 30-day payoff on the receivable – which is 48-60% per year!!! Sometimes you have to take what you can get but do so only for very short periods with a plan of action to obtain other financing at much better terms within the next 4-6 months.

To summarize, cash is king always but definitely in restricted capital environments. Money is still available but it takes longer and requires more creativity and perseverance to access it. Therefore, plan your cash needs and budget your cash resources as much as possible. Know your daily spend rate, be able to quickly determine how much cash you have on hand at any given time, know your expected operating cash flows and the timing of those cash flows. If you do not, you are headed for trouble. Or you may already be troubled –stressed out, continually seeking money from somewhere, continually trying to increase revenue even though you lose money with each sale. Stop, determine your cash outflows and inflows on a per project basis, and make decisions based on that information. In this market, you may have to jettison slow-paying, high complaint customers. When cash is king, these customers drag down your bottom line.

Posted by on June 13th, 2010 1 Comment

What is Cash Management

Cash flow is the essence of a business and the goal behind cash flow management is to determine the cash needed for day-to-day business devoid of losing investment options as a result of having two much cash. Although there are many cash management techniques they vary with the products and services sold, and how the particular business is run. When cash flow management is productive it allows a business owner to free up cash in order to make short or longterm investments. This paper will show the comparisons and contrasts of various techniques of cash management with one another. It will also review the various short-term offers available, and their differences.

By businesses projecting the inflow and outflow of cash, the financial manager can determine the amount of cash that will be available during a select period. Assorted techniques of this projection can be through a cash flow projection, shortening collection cycles, offer credit, monitor inventory, electronic funds transfer (EFT), and E-Commerce.

Preparing a cash flow projection is a useful tool in aiding the financial manager for future plans. If first starting out, projections should be done on a month-to-month basis, then yearly (Block & Hirt, 2005). Therefore, providing historical data in order to take those values and determine the possible cash level.

As a result of controlling inventory to sales surmises that current assets will not go up and down. Which in turn helps eliminates having to discount items or pay for storage. An example used by Block and Hirt (2005) was McGraw-Hill and textbooks. Too many or too little textbooks produced would mean loss of sales or excess inventory that could not be sold until the following school year. Businesses should buy inventory at the best price and that can be sold within a short time. Service businesses do not have to worry about inventory, but like most firms, they look for vendors that will offer stretch payments. Vendors that allow firms to pay within 30 to 60 day give those businesses more readily available cash. On the other hand, a business wants to expedite their customers payments and can do so by offering incentives like discounts on the entire bill or pushing up the payment cycle and include stiff late fees. (AllBusiness, 2007).

Using EFT is almost certainly is the most efficient and cost savings tool for a firm. Not only will it encompass all the above actions discussed, but it can be used for direct deposit of paychecks, and allow the firm to make their payments to creditors at the last minute. This table shows some of the cost savings of EFT compared to paper checks.
Item Typical Cost Saved by
Paper check stock $.02 -> $ .25 Payer
Paper remittance forms $.02 -> $.15 Payee
Envelopes $.02 -> .10 Payer or Payee
Postage $.22 -> $.33 Payer, Bank on statementing
Photocopies of checks $.02 -> .05 Payee, Bank on research items
Filing cabinets, storage space varies Payee, Payer, Bank

While each savings sounds small, they add up quickly, savings can total as much as $.50 per check (Echeck, 2008). Reasonably priced alternatives to EFT are Regional Collection Centers or a lock box system that can cash checks quicker. However, the time period is usually 24 hours and there is an additional cost to the firm. The internet makes E-Commerce a must for business. Purchases and payments can be made 24/7. A wider range of customers can be served, and investments by a company can be made though transactions.

Businesses seeking loans want the lowest interest rate possible. Since the U.S. dollar is the world’s international currency, many firms look for Eurodollar loans that offer the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR). The LIBOR rate is lower than the prime interest rate, making these loans more favorable. One of the problems of this loan is that most are given to larger worldwide companies like McDonald’s, which has numerous loans in euro-based currencies (Block & Hirt, 2005). Smaller firms seek loans from commercial banks which run from six months to a year, or seek a self-liquidating loan. Consequently, the problem with the latter is that the sale of current assets provides the cash to pay for the loan. Therefore, if the assets are not sold, a business can become bankrupt immediately. Other loans are available that can compensate for a small or large business. This type of loan allows a bank to supply credit to a business, but funds have to be immediately available to cover 20% of the loan fee and 10% of future commitments (Lowe, 2006).

In a trade credit, a company receives goods immediately, but does not have to pay until 30 or 60 days. Depending on the loan and vendor, a discount may be offered if it is paid with a specific time. An example would be using a credit card from Home Depot to purchase a new bathroom. Home Depot will finish the work but will not get paid for the work until later. Trade credits are also used as a signaling effect on the performance of both the seller and buyer. Companies with poor track records will have difficulty in getting longer credit days, so many opt not to see trade credit.

Commercial paper is an unsecured promissory note, money market or certificate of deposit issued by large banks and corporations. The short-term investment is usually for a minimum of $25,000 and to purchase inventory or to manage working capital (Wikipedia , 2007), which is why businesses selling products use this type of financing.

One of the most common tools used in short-term financing is the bank overdraft. A bank issues the overdrafts with the right to call them in at short notice, although most have a certain period attached to them. This type of financing should not be used to purchase machinery or equipment since the bank can call in the loan at short notice. Bank drafts are a good use for companies with season fluctuations in trades such as nurseries which have down times during the various seasons.

Every business should know the best way to manage its money and what finances are available if needed. Mismanaging a firm’s cash inflows and outflows may have the company facing a liquidity crunch, which in turn means to borrow funding. If this were to happen, a business may take a loan or line of credit at a higher rate. Planning ahead by a business by means of cash management techniques can prevent this from happening. Cash flow management can also help a company show a profit and productively stay in business.

 

Posted by on June 7th, 2010 Comments Off

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