CCJ

May 2015

Fleet Management News & Business Info | Commercial Carrier Journal

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80 COMMERCIAL CARRIER JOURNAL | MAY 2015 Using idle cash better By now you have improved your cash flow so much that your cash reserves are piling up. Even relatively small cash surpluses can generate still more cash, so you should take steps to increase the return on your idle cash. The first step in evaluating what to do with idle cash is to know how you got it and how long you will have it. Your investment options depend on whether this cash is available for a few days or a few months. Short-term cash surpluses can spring from a quick-paying cus- tomer, a well-run billing-and-collec- tion cycle or an effective stretching of your accounts payable. These surpluses might last only one to three weeks. Even a company with revenue of $200,000 per month might at any one time have $50,000 to $100,000 cash balances temporarily for a week or two before the bills come due. A large surplus-cash balance cre- ated because you aren't paying bills isn't a surplus at all. Make sure you cover all payroll tax deposits, trade payables and other obligations before you consider investment options. Late charges or a damaged reputa- tion will cost you more than you could earn on the funds. Using bank funds Many companies use two bank accounts – a money market account for deposit- ing all collections and a checking account for disbursements. By placing all customer payments immedi- ately into a money market account and transferring enough each week to cover checks written in the checking account, your cash bal- ances earn interest almost from the date of deposit. Even at today's low interest rates, you might be permanently invest- ing $50,000 to $100,000 in funds. If the return is 3 percent, that could be $1,500 to $3,000 per year in extra earnings for your company. A better investment might be to pay down your debt – even if only temporarily. If you have a line of credit at 10 percent and you can spare your extra $50,000 to reduce that debt, you would save more than $400 per month in interest – almost $5,000 per year. Sweep arrange- ments can make this process automatic. Your bank can take your excess cash each night and apply it toward your line of credit. In the morning, the bank gives you back the money. Over time, this has almost the same effect as paying down your loan, but it's more convenient and consistent. Your bookkeeper might object to the extra bank reconcilia- tion chores, but it's worth it in the long run. Your bank also offers a variety of certificates of deposit that make sense if you know of a particular need for The following is an excerpt from How to Manage Cash Flow, a manual produced by Commercial Carrier University. CCU is an educational program produced by Commercial Carrier Journal that includes business management manuals, seminars aimed at improving management skills and a website. For more information, visit www.commercialcarrieruniversity.com. HOW TO MANAGE CASH FLOW Even relatively small cash surpluses can be used to generate still more cash, so you should take steps to increase the return on your idle cash.

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