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Accounting: Day-to-Day Balance Sheet Care and Feeding 0 Views
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Transcript
- 00:00
Accounting Allah shmoop Day today Balance sheet care and feeding
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Okay people So let's put some mathematical meat on the
- 00:11
bones of our balance sheet and map a means for
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viewing liquidity Well some of this may feel familiar It's
- 00:18
going to be a slightly similar ish take on what
Full Transcript
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we've already gone over just to drive a few points
- 00:23
home So no you're not having deja vu But if
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that sounds good to you so we can check in
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the kitchen don't get caught up in five dollar words
- 00:31
and fancy Where'd accounting terms When you think about basic
- 00:34
concepts like Can I pay my freakin bills That concept
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is easy You pay your rent or you live in
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your ninety three Chevy Cash management Or more broadly balance
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sheet management is a big focus for accountants mainly because
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if there ever isn't enough cash in the till well
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that the company ends up here Okay we're cutting our
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balance sheet meat with a sharp knife So let's start
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at the butt steak part here First up on the
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liquidity rack The current ratio Yeah keyword current as in
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meaning within the next year Current ratio is a measure
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of what we got against what we owe Based on
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current I'ii short term assets and liabilities ones we only
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have to worry about for the next year But we
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have to worry about two things The ratio itself Obviously
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we want more assets than liabilities and how big the
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numbers are Like if we run a pastry shop and
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we have one hundred grand in short term assets but
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a million bucks in short term liabilities well then we're
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probably like months or weeks or minutes from bankruptcy When
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everyone comes to collect their bills or death or whatever
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it is we eloped If the same word true of
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one hundred million dollars revenue company of pretty good margins
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well then met Probably not a huge deal Those numbers
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were so small and weaken Digest them without a lot
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of grief And no they're not good But they're not
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grave inducing either Probably so what's a quote Good ratio
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unquote of short term assets Short term liabilities Well one
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No one is clearly dangerous But what about three toe
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won a million bucks in short term assets and only
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three hundred grand in short term liabilities like you have
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a million dollars in cash in your handy dandy B
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of a account And in total you on ly o
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three hundred grand Teo pay off everything Well at least
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all of your short term debts That's probably pretty good
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right At least you can sleep at night And this
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week anyway three to one Good one Good one Dangerous
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One two three Probably dead Yeah something like that Okay
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Another slab of meat Let's go for the prime rib
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here Accounts receivable You know we love those Love it
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Love it When people owe us money for product we've
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already sold them well Most accounts receivable are short term
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assets It's pretty rare to sell something and then not
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be owed that dough for over a year Presumably people
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will pay you within the next year You can always
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count on it Note that a lot of companies carry
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accounts receivable It's a net number meaning that they assume
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there will be a certain number of people who are
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not goingto pay the dough They Oh maybe the payers
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will go bankrupt and yet end up here Maybe they'll
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claim their religion tells them they're not required to pay
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not allowed here Whatever the reason they're going to end
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up being deadbeats So the company makes an estimated guess
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as to the number that will fail to pay and
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figures that number into their net calculations Usually there's some
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history behind the number like in the last five years
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the company average five percent bad account So if they're
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actually owed one hundred million dollars well they show accounts
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receivable as ninety five million having netted out five million
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for the likely deadbeats All right Aki Metric you'll need
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to know is accounts receivable Turnover that is you sell
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something to a customer who has to pay you in
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ninety days Well it's great that you made the sale
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but that sale cost you liquidity and that you had
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to use your precious usually scarce cash resources to buy
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inventory pay people to assemble the product ship it You
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deal with contracts and all that So at the moment
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of sale the sale actually sucked up your cash And
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you can imagine that if you were net three sixty
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five instead of net ninety well you could get very
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illiquid very fast with all your cash in the product
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That you sold the people who aren't going to pay
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you for a year So metering and measuring how quickly
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your accounts receivable Hey you is a big deal and
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the ratio was calculated as follows You take annual credit
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sales like things not sold for cash right away like
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on a credit card or I'll pay you later with
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an IOU divided by accounts receivable at the beginning of
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the year Okay Sochi Vocabulary concept Fact door companies use
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factors when they need cash Today not later But now
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a factor is essentially someone who buys in accounts receivable
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So for example if you have just sold four thousand
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pounds of neoprene to scuba doo for say a hundred
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grand But that hundred grand won't be paid to you
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for two months or so and there's a little bit
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of risk to it You might want to get the
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cash sooner rather than later so you'll pay pay up
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for the certainty In this case a fact door would
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give you a piece of paper allowing you to legally
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sign over to the fact or the right to receive
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that hundred thousand dollars Whenever the neoprene Byers said they
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would pay for it And that factor has the same
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rights you would have in going after the neoprene buyer
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to collect that money In return for that piece paper
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The factor might pay you in ninety eight thousand dollars
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right now Today cash So you're getting two percent less
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than you would have otherwise But you're getting the money
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two months sooner than you would have doing Rough math
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The factor for their grief is essentially making a one
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percent per month or twelve percent per year Annualized return
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on your money Taking a bit of risk their right
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there getting that one percent a month in payment in
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return for providing cash liquidity to you Yep Inventory is
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a liquid asset but inventory can and probably should be
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held on the balance sheet at a big discount What
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the company paid for it Okay Backto our friendly lemonade
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stand Suppose you bought a million cops at a dining
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each And if you had to suddenly turn them into
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cash Could you really get a diamond cup for them
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Like really Probably not The would be buyers would smell
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your desperation And there isn't a natural liquid market for
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semi used cups Smart companies negotiate with their vendor's a
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return policy something on the order of wealth I have
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the right to send back to you half of whatever
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I bought and get ninety five percent of what I
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paid you No questions asked Yeah something like that And
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that's our vendors talk And in accounting for all that
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will you just do the math and carry the net
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number or net value of that inventory on your book
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But the key idea here is that inventory isn't always
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liquid and often when it's converted into cash especially in
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an emergency situation there's a steep discount that you pay
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All right the four elements that comprise current assets or
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sorry our cash securities accounts receivable and inventory Yeah Zari
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So how did the current ratio even get born Well
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once upon a time a current assets and a current
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liability met And then they danced It was a mating
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ritual where the current asset climbed on top of the
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current liability and they did a calculation Yeah specifically they
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created a little baby current ratio It's a cute little
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bug oven accounting term which basically describes how fast we're
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paying our bills relative to collecting them Let's think about
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this All right If we had a ratio of one
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to one that would imply that five minutes after we've
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collected a bill we've paid what we owe What happens
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if someone who Oh Zack's money says Sue me I
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don't owe you the bill Yeah all right Well we
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might win after we sue him but it'll take months
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or years to go to cord and deal with lawyers
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and judges and a bizarre American legal system and will
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likely go bankrupt long before we collect the fourteen thousand
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two hundred thirty two dollars we are owed In fact
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in the real world the common tool large companies use
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against smaller ones with little to no leverage our maneuvers
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like this where they just hold up the back of
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their hand and tell the little companies Teo you know
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Reed between the lines so one to one current ratio
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is bad Bad news What is a good ratio Well
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think about three to one If we're analyzing a company
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and we note that it pays its bills really quickly
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That's a sign that the company feels great about its
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cash position that it will have plenty of dough left
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over at the end of the month to pay rent
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and not have to work out of the back of
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you know corporate pickup truck Well what about a current
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ratio of twenty to one What does that mean Well
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it means you have tons of current assets few current
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liabilities and well does that mean there's too much money
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tied up in inventory Yeah maybe We don't know We
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have to think about our peer group The industry risk
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volatility whole bunch other things Because why Well because ding
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ding ding these numbers don't exist in a vacuum right
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That is if your company has ten million dollars in
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revenue with current assets of one point five billion dollars
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and current liabilities of one billion dollars Well that's one
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point five to one current ratio right on the edge
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of bad But look at the magnitude How is it
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that you have only ten million dollars of revenue and
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such huge balance sheet items One tiny wrinkle to the
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bad and you're dead meat There's another ratio that speaks
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directly to liquidity The quick ratio not to be confused
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with the nest quick ratio which is way more delicious
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Well it's called the quick ratio as a reflection of
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some hand out in front vendor or saying Pay me
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and then you being ableto quickly pay them That works
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clever well The quick ratio is all about immediate cash
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That is how quickly could you come up with whatever
- 09:36
amount of cachet there for defensive or offensive purposes Defense
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You lose a lawsuit If you agree to pay all
- 09:42
of it off immediately you can pay half of what
- 09:45
the judged amount wass agree not to appeal And well
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then the lawsuit goes away Offense A competitor wants to
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get out from his business a s a P Maybe
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the founder is sick or in the middle of a
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midlife crisis in just took delivery of his convertible red
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Porsche And if you pay X dollars today ish in
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cash well then you can have his business for a
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steel You could buy it for half What Get it
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market So we bludgeon view with what comprised current assets
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cash securities accounts receivable and inventory Which of these is
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not like the other Yeah inventory if you need cash
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quick Well you don't wanna have to be selling inventory
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to get there Selling inventory usually ain't all that quick
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And while it's technically a current asset the notion of
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current is broadly defined when it comes to a thousand
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spare tractor treads Usually there's not even a category for
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tractor treads on eBay in some Wall Street bars and
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bean counter coffee counters while the quick ratio is called
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the acid test But if someone quotes you acid test
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I'll check to be sure they're wearing shoes It's highly
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likely they attended a you know Woodstock All right Another
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ratio we have think about is de esos or days
- 10:53
sales outstanding It is calculated as accounts receivable over sales
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made on credit Poof What does that mean Well you'll
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notice if you aren't asleep yet that this is sort
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of the inverse ratio of the accounts receivable turnover calculation
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We just did Again it's all relative A big de
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eso number means that it's taking us forever to collect
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our doe That's not a good sign usually but a
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jet engine company might make a sale and not deliver
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the full engine for like two years albeit with partial
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payments made along the way so you can't compare it
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to a lemonade stands CSOs right Well the basic idea
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here is just that if you are collecting your bills
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relatively quickly well that's good And if you're not that's
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bad And in real life most financial managers pay a
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lot more attention to relative trends within a company or
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in industry Then they do the external world meaning that
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if last quarter de esos were thirty seven and suddenly
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this quarter there forty one well then Houston we may 00:11:46.679 --> [endTime] have a problem
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