Liquidity Management
Liquidity Management
Liquidity Management
What is liquidity?
Assets are separated into two categories, current assets and non-
current assets (everything else).
Current assets are as follows:
Cash
Marketable securities (These would include publicly traded stocks,
bonds, and other investments)
Inventories (Products, finished goods, raw materials, etc. that can
be sold)
Accounts receivable (Cash owed from sales to customers on credit)
Current Liabilities
• Current Ratio: It addresses the current debt and asset of the company.
• Acid Test Ratio: This measures the ability of the company, how
efficiently it uses its cash or asset.
• Inventory Turnover Ratio: It addresses how many times the
inventory is used or sold in a year.
• Accounts Receivable Turnover: It indicates how efficient is a
company in credit score and debt.
Advantages Of Short Term Solvency Ratio
• Long term solvency ratio is the total asset of the company divided
by the total liabilities or debt obligations in the market.
• Solvency Ratio = Total assets
Total Liabilities
• Quick Cash: Long term solvency gives you the chance to quickly
convert the assets into cash. This method can be applied if you
want to profit in less time.
• There are potential conflicts between these two objectives because they often
entail opposite policy actions. Minimising the interest cost means that during a
recession, interest rates are low. The government should exchange its maturing
securities with hew long-term securities carrying low interest rates so that their
interest cost is less in the future.
Techniques of Debt Management:
The debt to asset ratio is a leverage ratio that measures the amount of
total assets that are financed by creditors instead of investors.
Debt To Total Assets = Total Debt
Total Assets
Interpretation: Percentage of total assets provided by creditors. Total
debt is a subset of total liabilities. Typically, you sum total long term
debt and the current portion of long term debt in the numerator. Other
additions might be made: notes payable, capital leases, and operating
leases if capitalized.
Debt to Equity
Cash flow to debt ratio as the name suggests compares the total cash
flow to total debt due by the company. The ratio tells about the debt-
paying capacity of a company.
CFO to debt = CFO + Interest And Taxes Paid In Cash
Average total liabilities
Interpretation: Ability to repay total liabilities in a given year from
operations. See caveat above regarding numerator.
Cash Flow Adequacy
The cash flow adequacy ratio measures whether the cash generated by a
company's operations are enough to pay for its other expenses that are
likely to be ongoing for example, any fixed asset acquisitions or dividends
to shareholders.
Cash Flow Adequacy = CFO
CAPEX + debt and dividends payments
Interpretation: Measures how many times capital expenditures, debt
repayments, cash dividends covered by CFO.
Advantages of a Debt Management
Quick To Implement
A DMP allows you to start making reduced payments to your debts immediately. The payments
you make next month could be your first DMP payments putting you straight back in control of
your money. Collection letters and phone calls from your creditors will take 2-3 months to
reduce.
Private Solution
Because it is an informal solution, anyone can start a DMP. There is no formal register of DMPs
and no-one other than your creditors will know about the agreement. For this reason starting a
DMP is very unlikely to affect your job.
Flexibility
Once you have started a DMP, you can increase your payments at any time if your situation
improves or even pay off your debt in full if you get a windfall. In addition it is possible to
leave creditors out of the plan or even pay off one before another.
Disadvantages of a Debt Management