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In management accounting, the Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC) measures how long a firm will be deprived of cash if it increases its investment in resources in order to expand customer sales. It is thus a measure of the liquidity risk entailed by growth. However, shortening the CCC creates its own risks: while a firm could even achieve a negative CCC by collecting from customers before paying suppliers, a policy of strict collections and lax payments is not always sustainable.
Contents |
CCC | = | # days between disbursing cash and collecting cash in connection with undertaking a discrete unit of operations. | ||||||||
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= | Inventory conversion period | + | Receivables conversion period | – | Payables conversion period | |||||
= | Avg. Inventory
COGS / 365 |
+ | Avg. Accounts Receivable
Credit Sales / 365 |
– | Avg. Accounts Payable
COGS / 365 |
Cashflows insufficient. The term "cash conversion cycle" refers to the timespan between a firm's disbursing and collecting cash. However, the CCC cannot be directly observed in cashflows, because these are also influenced by investment and financing activities; it must be derived from Statement of Financial Position data associated with the firm's operations.
Equation describes retailer. Although the term "cash conversion cycle" technically applies to a firm in any industry, the equation is generically formulated to apply specifically to a retailer. Since a retailer's operations consist in buying and selling inventory, the equation models the time between
Equation describes a firm that buys & sells on account. Also, the equation is written to accommodate a firm that buys and sells on account. For a cash-only firm, the equation would only need data from sales operations (e.g. changes in inventory), because disbursing cash would be directly measurable as purchase of inventory, and collecting cash would be directly measurable as sale of inventory. However, no such 1:1 correspondence exists for a firm that buys and sells on account: Increases and decreases in inventory do not occasion cashflows but accounting vehicles (receivables and payables, respectively); increases and decreases in cash will remove these accounting vehicles (receivables and payables, respectively) from the books. Thus, the CCC must be calculated by tracing a change in cash through its effect upon receivables, inventory, payables, and finally back to cash—thus, the term cash conversion cycle, and the observation that these four accounts "articulate" with one another.
Label | Transaction | Accounting (use different accounting vehicles if the transactions occur in a different order) |
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A |
Suppliers (agree to) deliver inventory
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B |
Customers (agree to) acquire that inventory
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C |
Firm disburses $X cash to suppliers
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D |
Firm collects $Y cash from customers
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Taking these four transactions in pairs, analysts draw attention to five important intervals, referred to as conversion cycles (or conversion periods):
Knowledge of any three of these conversion cycles permits derivation of the fourth (leaving aside the operating cycle, which is just the sum of the inventory conversion period and the receivables conversion period.)
Hence,
interval {C → D} | = | interval {A → B} | + | interval {B → D} | – | interval {A → C} |
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CCC (in days) | = | Inventory conversion period | + | Receivables conversion period | – | Payables conversion period |
In calculating each of these three constituent Conversion Cycles, we use the equation TIME =LEVEL/RATE (since each interval roughly equals the TIME needed for its LEVEL to be achieved at its corresponding RATE).
Our aim of studying cash conversion cycle and its calculation is to change the policies relating to credit purchase and credit sales. We can change our standard of payment of credit purchase or getting cash from our debtors on the basis of reports of cash conversion cycle. If it tells good cash liquidity position, we can maintain our past credit policies. Its also aim is to study cash flow of business. Cash flow statement and cash conversion cycle study will be helpful for cash flow analysis.