Fundamentals of Financial Management (Concise 6th Edition)

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480 Part 6 Working Capital Management, Forecasting, and Multinational Financial Management


decline, its interest charges would be reduced, and its pro! ts and stock price would
be improved.

15-4b Calculating the CCC from Financial Statements
The preceding section illustrates the CCC in theory; but in practice, we would cal-
culate the CCC based on the! rm’s! nancial statements. Moreover, the actual CCC
would almost certainly differ from the theoretically forecasted value because of
real-world complexities such as shipping delays, sales slowdowns, and customer
delays in making payments. Moreover, a! rm such as GFI would start a new cycle
before the earlier one ended, and this too would muddy the waters.
To see how the CCC is calculated in practice, assume that GFI has been in busi-
ness for several years and is now in a stable position—placing orders, making
sales, obtaining collections, and making payments on a recurring basis. The fol-
lowing data were taken from its latest! nancial statements:

Annual sales $1,216,666
Cost of goods sold 1,013,889
Inventory 250,000
Accounts receivable 300,000
Accounts payable 150,000
We begin with the inventory conversion period:

15-2 Inventory conversion period!
Inventory
Cost _______________________of goods^ sold^ per day^

! ______________$250,000
$1,013,889/365
! 90 days

Thus, it takes GFI an average of 90 days to sell its merchandise, not the 60 days
called for in the business plan. Note also that inventory is carried at cost; so the
denominator of the equation should be the cost of goods sold, not sales.
The average collection period (or days sales outstanding) is calculated next:

15-3 Average collection period! Receivables___________
Sales/365

! ______________$300,000
$1,216,666/365
! 90 days

So it takes GFI 90 days after a sale to receive cash, not the 60 days called for in the
business plan. Because receivables are recorded at the sales price, we use sales
rather than cost of goods sold in the denominator.

The Cash Conversion Cycle
F I G U R E 1 5! 3

Finish Goods
and Sell Them

Receive
Materials

Pay Cash for
Purchased
Materials

Collect Cash
for Accounts
Receivable

Days

Inventory
Conversion
Period (60 Days)

Average
Collection
Period (60 Days)

Payables
Deferral
Period (40 Days)

Cash
Conversion
Period (80 days)
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