This article is about the accounting term. For the board game, see
Cashflow 101.
Cashflow 101 is an educational tool in Board game format designed by Robert Kiyosaki (author of Rich Dad Poor Dad) which aims to For the Don Rosa comic, see
Cash Flow (comics).
Cash Flow is an Uncle Scrooge -adventure comic written and drawn by Don Rosa from 1987 and first of his stories where the Beagle Boys For the CNBC Asia show, see
Cash Flow (CNBC Asia).
CNBC's Cash Flow is a television business news program aired every weekday at 1000am Singapore / Hong Kong / Taiwan time on CNBC Asia
Cash flow is a term that refers to the amount of cash being received and spent by a business during a defined period of time, sometimes tied to a specific project. Cash usually refers to Money in the form of Currency, such as Banknotes and Coins In Bookkeeping and Finance, Measurement of cash flow can be used
- to evaluate the state or performance of a business or project.
- to determine problems with liquidity. Accounting liquidity (liquidity is a measure of the ability of a Debtor to pay their debts as and when they fall due Being profitable does not necessarily mean being liquid. A company can fail because of a shortage of cash, even while profitable.
- to generate project rate of returns. In Finance, rate of return ( ROR) also known as return on investment ( ROI) rate of profit or sometimes just return, is The time of cash flows into and out of projects are used as inputs to financial models such as internal rate of return, and net present value. The internal rate of return (IRR is a Capital budgeting metric used by firms to decide whether they should make Investments It is an indicator of the efficiency Net present value ( NPV) or net present worth ( NPW) is defined as the total Present value (PV of a Time series of Cash flows
- to examine income or growth of a business when it is believed that accrual accounting concepts do not represent economic realities. Alternately, cash flow can be used to 'validate' the net income generated by accrual accounting.
Cash flow as a generic term may be used differently depending on context, and certain cash flow definitions may be adapted by analysts and users for their own uses. Common terms (with relatively standardized definitions) include operating cash flow and free cash flow. In Financial accounting, operating cash flow (OCF cash flow provided by operations or cash flow from operating activities, refers to the amount of In Corporate finance, free cash flow (FCF is a Cash flow available for distribution among all the security holders of a company
Classification
Cash flows can be classified into:
- Operational cash flows: Cash received or expended as a result of the company's core business activities. In Financial accounting, operating cash flow (OCF cash flow provided by operations or cash flow from operating activities, refers to the amount of
- Investment cash flows: Cash received or expended through capital expenditure, investments or acquisitions. Investment or investing is a term with several closely-related meanings in Business management, Finance and Economics, related to saving In Economics, capital or capital Goods or real capital refers to items of extensive value
- Financing cash flows: Cash received or expended as a result of financial activities, such as interests and dividends. The field of finance refers to the concepts of Time, Money and Risk and how they are interrelated Interest is a fee paid on borrowed capital Assets lent include Money, Shares, Consumer goods through Hire purchase, major assets Dividends are payments made by a Corporation to its Shareholder members
All three together - the net cash flow - are necessary to reconcile the beginning cash balance to the ending cash balance. Cash flow after expenditures affecting payments. Loan draw downs or equity injections, that is just shifting of capital but no expenditure as such, are not considered in the net cash flow.
Benefits from using Cash flow
The cash flow statement is one of the four main financial statements of a company. Purpose The cash flow statement was previously known as the statement of changes in financial position or flow of funds statement. The cash flow statement can be examined to determine the short-term sustainability of a company. If cash is increasing (and operational cash flow is positive), then a company will often be deemed to be healthy in the short-term. Increasing or stable cash balances suggest that a company is able to meet its cash needs, and remain solvent. This information cannot always be seen in the income statement or the balance sheet of a company. For instance, a company may be generating profit, but still have difficulty in remaining solvent.
The cash flow statement breaks the sources of cash generation into three sections: operational cash flows, investing, and financing. This breakdown allows the user of financial statements to determine where the company is deriving its cash for operations. For example, a company may be notionally profitable but generating little operational cash (as may be the case for a company that barters its products rather than selling for cash). In such a case, the company may be deriving additional operating cash by issuing shares, or raising additional debt finance.
Companies that have announced significant writedowns of assets, particularly goodwill, may have substantially higher cash flows than the announced earnings would indicate. The term write-off (or write-down describes a reduction in recognized value For example, telecoms firms that paid substantial sums for 3G licenses or for acquisitions have subsequently had to write-off goodwill, that is, indicate that these investments were now worth much less. 3G is the third generation of mobile phone standards and Technology, superseding 2 These write-downs have frequently resulted in large announced annual losses, such as Vodafone's announcement in May 2006 that it had lost £21. Vodafone is a Mobile network operator headquartered in Berkshire, England, UK. 9 billion due to a writedown of its German acquisition, Mannesmann, one of the largest annual losses in European history. Mannesmann AG was a German corporation with headquarters in Düsseldorf. Despite this large "loss", which represented a sunk cost, Vodafone's operating cash flows were solid: "Strong cash flow is one of the most attractive aspects of the cellphone business, allowing operators like Vodafone to return money to shareholders even as they rack up huge paper losses. "[1]
In certain cases, cash flow statements may allow careful analysts to detect problems that would not be evident from the other financial statements alone. For example, WorldCom committed an accounting fraud that was discovered in 2002; the fraud consisted primarily of treating ongoing expenses as capital investments, thereby fraudulently boosting net income. Use of one measure of cash flow (free cash flow) would potentially have detected that there was no change in overall cash flow (including capital investments). In Corporate finance, free cash flow (FCF is a Cash flow available for distribution among all the security holders of a company [2]
Dangers of isolating Operating cash flow
When analysts and the media refer to 'cash flow', they are most likely referring to "Operating Cash Flow". This is only one of the three types of cash flows. There are inherent problems in isolating only this type of flow, because businesses can easily manipulate the classification.
Common methods of distorting the results include:
- Sales - Sell the receivables to a factor for instant cash. (leading)
- Inventory - Don't pay your suppliers for an additional few weeks at period end. (lagging)
- Sales Commissions - Management can form a separate (but unrelated) company to act as its agent. The book of business can then be purchased quarterly as an investment.
- Wages - Remunerate with stock options.
- Maintenance - Contract with the predecessor company that you prepay five years worth for them to continue doing the work
- Equipment Leases - Buy it
- Rent - Buy the property (sale and lease back, for example).
- Oil Exploration costs - Replace reserves by buying another company's.
- Research & Development - Wait for the product to be proven by a start-up lab; then buy the lab.
- Consulting Fees - Pay in shares from treasury since usually to related parties
- Interest - Issue convertible debt where the conversion rate changes with the unpaid interest.
- Taxes - Buy shelf companies with TaxLossCarryForward's. Or gussy up the purchase by buying a lab or O&G explore co. with the same TLCF.
Example of a positive $40 cash flow
| Transaction |
In (Debit) |
Out (Credit) |
| Incoming Loan |
+$50. 00 |
|
| Sales (which were paid for in cash) |
+$30. 00 |
|
| Materials |
|
-$10. 00 |
| Labour |
|
-$10. 00 |
| Purchased Capital |
|
-$10. 00 |
| Loan Repayment |
|
-$5. 00 |
| Taxes |
|
-$5. 00 |
| Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |
. . . . . . . +$40. 00. . . . . . . |
In this example the following types of flows are included:
- Incoming loan: financial flow
- Sales: operational flow
- Materials: operational flow
- Labor: operational flow
- Purchased Capital: Investment flow
- Loan Repayment: financial flow
- Taxes: financial flow
Let us, for example, compare two companies using only total cash flow and then separate cash flow streams. A loan is a type of Debt. This article focuses exclusively on monetary loans although in practice any material object might be lent The last three years show the following total cash flows:
Company A:
Year 1: cash flow of +10M
Year 2: cash flow of +11M
Year 3: cash flow of +12M
Company B:
Year 1: cash flow of +15M
Year 2: cash flow of +16M
Year 3: cash flow of +17M
Company B has a higher yearly cash flow and looks like a better one in which to invest. Now let us see how their cash flows are made up:
Company A:
Year 1: OC: +20M FC: +5M IC: -15M = +10M
Year 2: OC: +21M FC: +5M IC: -15M = +11M
Year 3: OC: +22M FC: +5M IC: -15M = +12M
Company B:
Year 1: OC: +10M FC: +5M IC: 0 = +15M
Year 2: OC: +11M FC: +5M IC: 0 = +16M
Year 3: OC: +12M FC: +5M IC: 0 = +17M
- OC = Operational Cash, FC = Financial Cash, IC = Investment Cash
Now it seems that Company A is actually earning more cash by its core activities and has already spent 45M in long term investments, of which the revenues will only show up after three years. When comparing investments using cash flows always make sure to use the same cash flow layout.
See also
References
- ^ O'Brien, Kevin J. A cash flow hedge is a hedge of the exposure to the Variability of Cash flow that is attributable to a particular risk associated with a recognized Cash flow forecasting is the modeling of a company or asset’s future financial liquidity over a specific timeframe Purpose The cash flow statement was previously known as the statement of changes in financial position or flow of funds statement. In Investing, the cash-on-cash return is the ratio of annual before-tax Cash flow to the total amount of cash invested expressed as a percentage In Finance, the discounted cash flow (or DCF approach describes a method of valuing a project company or asset using the concepts of the Time value of money In Corporate finance, free cash flow (FCF is a Cash flow available for distribution among all the security holders of a company An Income Statement, also called a Profit and Loss Statement (P&L is a financial statement for companies that indicates how Revenue (money The internal rate of return (IRR is a Capital budgeting metric used by firms to decide whether they should make Investments It is an indicator of the efficiency Net present value ( NPV) or net present worth ( NPW) is defined as the total Present value (PV of a Time series of Cash flows Return of capital (ROC refers to payments back to "capital owners" (shareholders partners unitholders that exceed the growth (net income/taxable income of a business . "Vodafone's £21.9 billion loss overshadows sales", International Herald Tribune, 2006-05-30. The International Herald Tribune is a widely read English language international Newspaper Year 2006 ( MMVI) was a Common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. Events 1416 - The Council of Constance, called by the Emperor Sigismund a supporter of Antipope John XXIII burns Jerome of Prague following
- ^ Elstrom, Peter. "How to Hide $3.8 Billion in Expenses", BusinessWeek, 2002-07-08. BusinessWeek is a business Magazine published by McGraw-Hill. See also 2002 (disambiguation Year 2002 ( MMII) was a Common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. Events 939 - The Major Occultation or Ghaybat el-Kubra of Muhammad al-Mahdi 1099 - First Crusade: 15000
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