Cash Flow Management

CASH FLOW MANAGEMENT

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production
improves: fin/modelling

Cash Flow Management

Profit is an opinion. Cash is a fact. More businesses fail from cash flow problems than from lack of profitability. Cash flow management is the discipline of knowing exactly what cash you have, what is coming in, what is going out, and how long your runway is.

The 13-Week Rolling Cash Flow Forecast

The gold standard for operational cash management. Updated weekly, it gives a 90-day forward view of the cash position.

Structure

Opening Cash Balance
+ Receipts (collections from customers)
+ Other inflows (loan drawdowns, asset sales, investment income)
- Operating Payments (salaries, rent, suppliers)
- Tax Payments (PAYE, VAT, provisional tax)
- Debt Service (loan repayments, interest)
- Capital Expenditure
= Closing Cash Balance

Building the Forecast

Receipts: Based on invoices raised + expected collection timing

Payments: Based on supplier invoices + committed costs

Rule: Be conservative on receipts, realistic on payments.


Working Capital Management

Working capital = Current Assets − Current Liabilities. The components that matter most:

Debtor Days (DSO — Days Sales Outstanding)

DSO = (Debtors Balance ÷ Revenue) × 30

Benchmark: Match or beat your payment terms. If terms are 30 days and DSO is 52 days — you have a collection problem.

To reduce DSO:

Creditor Days (DPO — Days Payable Outstanding)

DPO = (Creditors Balance ÷ Cost of Sales) × 30

Extend creditor days where possible — paying suppliers later improves your cash position. But do not damage relationships or forfeit early payment discounts worth more than the cash benefit of delay.

Inventory Days (for product businesses)

Inventory Days = (Inventory ÷ Cost of Sales) × 30

Excess inventory ties up cash. Review slow-moving stock regularly.

Cash Conversion Cycle

CCC = DSO + Inventory Days − DPO

A lower CCC means less cash tied up in operations. Negative CCC (common in subscription businesses that collect before delivering) is a cash advantage.


Cash Runway

Runway (months) = Current Cash Balance ÷ Monthly Net Cash Burn

Net cash burn = Total cash out − Total cash in (for a month).

Use this as the headline metric in board and investor reporting. Any runway below 6 months should trigger proactive action — fundraising, cost reduction, or revenue acceleration — before the position becomes critical.


Short-Term Cash Shortfall Options

When the forecast shows a shortfall:

OptionSpeedCostNotes
Invoice discounting / debtor financeFastMediumAdvance against outstanding invoices
Overdraft facilityFastMediumReserve for true emergencies
Asset-based lendingMediumVariableBorrow against plant, equipment
Supplier payment extensionFastLow (relationship risk)Communicate proactively
Customer deposit / advanceVariesLowAsk for upfront payment on new work
Director loanFastLowTemporary measure; document properly
FactoringMediumHigherSell debtor book outright

Cash Flow and Tax Planning (South Africa)

Tax payments are the largest single cash outflow for most profitable SMBs. Map them onto the cash flow forecast:

PaymentApproximate TimingBasis
PAYE/UIF/SDL7th of each monthPrior month payroll
VAT25th bi-monthlyVAT201
Provisional Tax (1st)6 months into tax yearEstimated annual tax
Provisional Tax (2nd)Year-endEstimated annual tax
Optional 3rd Provisional7 months after year-endTop-up to avoid penalty
Income Tax balanceOn assessmentAfter ITR14 filed

Cash tip: Set aside a portion of each month's revenue into a designated tax savings account. Chasing the SARS payment after spending the money is how profitable businesses get into trouble.