Matt Pein

Cash Hungry: How a Business Will Eat Your Money

Asset-Heavy (Hungry) Businesses Asset-heavy businesses are companies that need a lot of assets to operate and are inefficient at turning those assets into sales and profit. Asset-heavy business models include rail companies, mines, refineries, construction, and manufacturers – businesses with substantial amounts of machines, plant & equipment, inventory, and/or accounts receivable. Asset-heavy businesses are called

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Free Cash Flow: A Guide to Understanding Cash Generation

A Quick Congratulations Hello, and welcome back to the “SMB Fundamentals” series. Let’s take a minute to congratulate you! We have covered some fundamental, and powerful concepts in finance. Now you know how to think about ROI, Investing for Growth, and Balance Sheets. Safe to say you are getting clued up without paying $60,000 for

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Funding: See What the Debt-Equity Split of Your Business

Financial Funding Ratios Another set of ratios we can use is what I call the Financial Funding Ratios. Equity Funding and the Liability Funding Ratios show who funds a company’s operations. Remember a balance sheet summarises what a company owns (assets) and how it financed the purchases (Liabilities and Equity). The ratios indicate whether a

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Financial Stability 101: How to Steer Clear from Bankruptcy

Solvency Ratios A company’s solvency is its ability to pay off long-term debts, and obligations. Solvency ratios are important for owners because it shows the level of debt the company holds relative to the profit it generates, and how a company funds their purchases. As long as a company generates, or has, enough cash to

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Liquidity Made Simple: Can Your Assets Cover Short-Term Cash Demands?

Liquidity Ratios Liquidity is a company’s ability to quickly convert assets into cash, to pay off short-term liabilities, or obligations without raising money 3rd-parties. The emphasis on liquidity is the short-term! Liquidity Ratios only concern the “Current” parts of a balance sheet. See below Companies need “liquidity” to cover their short-term liabilities and obligations. If

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