Accounts Receivable Management

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright 2005 by Thomson Learning, Inc. Chapter 5 Accounts Receivable Management A / R.
Advertisements

Copyright 2005 by Thomson Learning, Inc. Chapter 6 Credit Policy and Collections Order Order Sale Payment Sent Cash Placed Received Received Accounts Collection.
Credit Control ( AR Management)
Management of cash and receivables
Financial Management F OR A S MALL B USINESS. FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 2 Welcome 1. Agenda 2. Ground Rules 3. Introductions.
KHALID AZIZ Capital Budgeting. 2 JOIN KHALID AZIZ ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM. FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 1,3,4 ICAP MODULE.
Accounting Information Systems. JOIN KHALID AZIZ ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM. FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 1,3,4 ICAP MODULE.
Valuation of Inventories: A Cost-Basis Approach
Chapter 20 Credit and Inventory Management
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible Web site, in whole or in part.
1 Chapter 14 Working Capital Management and Policies McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Short-Term Financial Management
Short-Term Financial Management
Key Concepts Understand the key issues related to credit management
Key Concepts and Skills
FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTING Sixth Canadian Edition Lusztig, Cleary, Schwab.
Current Asset Management (Chapter 7) (Chapter 6 – pages 143 – 145)
Current Asset Management What are Current Assets? Cash Conversion Cycle.
Inventories: IAS 2. JOIN KHALID AZIZ ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM. FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 1,3,4 ICAP MODULE B, B.COM, BBA,
1 The Master Budget 2 JOIN KHALID AZIZ ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM. FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 1,3,4 ICAP MODULE B, B.COM,
Performance Evaluation for Decentralized Operations & TRANSFER PRICING.
Trade Credit and Shareholder Value
Basic Accounting Principles The Financial Statements.
Accounts Receivable, Inventory, and Total Quality Management.
1 - 1 The Accountant’s Role in the Organization JOIN KHALID AZIZ l ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM. l FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP.
Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 0 Chapter 17 Working Capital Management.
Throughput Accounting
This week its Accounting Theory
Income Recognition and Measurement of Assets. Join khalid aziz  ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM.  FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE.
Current Asset Management
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Fundamentals of Corporate Finance 3e Ross, Thompson, Christensen, Westerfield and Jordan Slides.
Statement of Cash Flow In financial accounting, a cash flow statement, also known as statement of cash flows or funds flow statement, is a financial statement.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Current Asset Management 7.
Analyzing Financial Data and Ratios
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies All Rights Reserved 17.0 Chapter 17 Working Capital Management.
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Credit and Inventory Management Chapter Twenty Prepared by Anne Inglis, Ryerson University.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Working Capital Management Chapter 17.
18 Management of Accounts Receivable and Inventories ©2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Copyright  1998 by Harcourt Brace &Company Chapter 6 Credit Policy and Collections Order Order Sale Cash Placed Received Received Accounts Collection.
T20.1 Chapter Outline Chapter 20 Credit and Inventory Management Chapter Organization 20.1Credit and Receivables 20.2Terms of the Sale 20.3Analyzing Credit.
Trade Management  Module 4.  Learning Objectives:  Managing receivables  Securing receivables  Sales documentation.
Copyright  2002 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning TM Chapter 5 Accounts Receivable Management A / R.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western Chapter 23 Short-Term Financial Management Professor XXXXX Course Name / Number.
Copyright  1998 by Harcourt Brace &Company Chapter 5 Accounts Receivable Management A / R.
CDA COLLEGE BUS235: PRINCIPLES OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS Lecture 10 Lecture 10 Lecturer: Kleanthis Zisimos.
Financial Management Back to Table of Contents. Financial Management 2 Chapter 21 Financial Management Analyzing Your Finances Managing Your Finances.
Chapter 30 Principles PrinciplesofCorporateFinance Ninth Edition Working Capital Management Slides by Matthew Will Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill.
Receivables Management For Management Related Notes and Assignments, Visit
20-0 Credit Policy Effects 20.3 Revenue Effects Delay in receiving cash from sale May be able to increase price May increase total sales Cost Effects –
10-1 Chapter 10 Accounts Receivable Accounts Receivable and Inventory Management u Credit and Collection Policies u Analyzing the Credit Applicant.
17-1 Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
KHALID AZIZ 0322* The Measurement Fundamentals of Financial Accounting.
Financial Management Glencoe Entrepreneurship: Building a Business Analyzing Your Finances Managing Your Finances 21.1 Section 21.2 Section 21.
Copyright ©2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning Chapter 17 Management of Accounts Receivable and Inventories.
LOS 6 Credit-Granting Decisions Learning Outcome Statements (LOS) identify information costs and the credit-granting decision understand the traditional.
A sound managerial control requires proper management of liquid assets & inventory. These assets are part of working capital of the business. Receivables.
Financial Statements, Forecasts, and Planning
Summary of Previous Lecture In our lecture about Cash and Marketable Securities Management we studied the following topics. Key variables that should be.
Chapter 20 Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Fifth Edition Slides by Matthew Will McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Credit Management CHAPTER 6. Chapter Outline Credit and Receivables Components of Credit Policy Investment in Receivables Credit Policy Evaluation Optimal.
Introduction to Management Accounting
Pricing and Credit Decisions
Working Capital Management
Trade Credit and Shareholder Value
Cash and Working Capital Management
Trade Credit and Shareholder Value
Overview of Working Capital Management
Accounts Receivable and Inventory Management
Overview of Working Capital Management
Chapter 8 Overview of Working Capital Management
Presentation transcript:

Accounts Receivable Management A / R

JOIN KHALID AZIZ ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM. FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 1,3,4 ICAP MODULE B, B.COM, BBA, MBA & PIPFA. COST ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 2,3 ICAP MODULE D, BBA, MBA & PIPFA. CONTACT: 0322-3385752 0312-2302870 R-1173,ALNOOR SOCIETY, BLOCK 19,F.B.AREA, KARACHI, PAKISTAN.

JOIN KHALID AZIZ CRASH CLASSES FOR COMPLETION OF IMPORTANT TOPICS ICMAP STAGE 1 & 2 FINANCIAL AND COST ACCOUNTING JOIN NOW

The Cash Flow Timeline Order Order Sale Payment Sent Cash Placed Received Received Accounts Collection < Inventory > < Receivable > < Float > Time ==> Accounts Disbursement < Payable > < Float > Invoice Received Payment Sent Cash Disbursed

Learning Objectives Define credit policy and indicate its components. Describe the typical credit-granting sequence. Apply net present value analysis to credit extension decisions. Define credit scoring and explain limitations. List the elements in a credit rating report. Describe how receivables management can benefit from EDI.

Trade Credit and Shareholder Value Trade credit arises when goods sold under delayed payment terms Traced to Romans due to obstacles faced in transferring money through various trading areas Credit terms are taken for granted today Value can be added by managing three areas: aggregate investment in receivables credit terms credit standards Over-investing in receivables can be costly ...but, if credit terms are not competitive, then lost sales can be costly

Conclusion Minimize bad debts and outstanding receivables Maintain financial flexibility Optimize mix of company assets Convert receivables to cash in a timely manner Analyze customer risk Respond to customer needs

A/R Management and Shareholder Value Marketing Strategy Market Share Obj. Aggregate Inv. in A/R Credit Terms Credit Standards Total Dollar Investment Length of Time to Pay Acceptance of Marg Cust. Max Shareholder Value

Trade vs. Bank Credit Length of terms Security Amounts involved Resource transferred (goods vs. money) Extent of analysis

Why Extend Credit? Financial Motive Operating Motive Contracting Motive Pricing Motive All reasons are related to market imperfections

Financial Motive Potential of getting a higher price Sellers raise capital at lower rates than customers and have cost advantages vis-a-vis banks due to: similarity of customers the information gathered in the selling process lower probability of default (the goods purchased are an essential element of the buyer’s business) seller can more easily resell product if payment is not made.

Operating Motive Respond to variable and uncertain demand Change credit terms rather than: install extra capacity, building or depleting inventories, or forcing customers to wait.

JOIN KHALID AZIZ CRASH CLASSES FOR COMPLETION OF IMPORTANT TOPICS ICMAP STAGE 1 & 2 FINANCIAL AND COST ACCOUNTING JOIN NOW

Contracting Cost Motive Buyer gets to inspect goods prior to payment Seller has less theft with separation of collection and product delivery

Pricing Motive Change price by changing credit terms

Trends Affecting Trade Credit Zero net working capital objective Improved internal and external credit-related information Electronic commerce

The Credit Decision Process Marketing contact Credit investigation Customer contact for information Finalize written documents, e.g.. security agreements Establish customer credit file Financial analysis Time

Basic Credit Granting Model S - EXP(S) NPV = ----------------- - VCR(S) 1 + iCP Where: NPV = net present value of the credit sale VCR = variable cost ratio S = dollar amount of credit sale EXP = credit administration and collection expense ratio i = daily interest rate CP = collection period for sale

Managing the Credit Policy Should we extend credit? Credit policy components Credit-granting decision

Should We Extend Credit? Follow industry practice Extent and form of credit offer in-house credit card sell receivables to a factor captive finance company?

Components of Credit Policy Development of credit standards profile of minimally acceptable credit worthy customer Credit terms credit period cash discount Credit limit maximum dollar level of credit balances Collection procedures how long to wait past due date to initiate collection efforts methods of contact whether and at what point to refer account to collection agency

Credit-Granting Decision Development of credit standards Gathering necessary information Credit analysis: applying credit standards Risk analysis

Grant-Granting Sequence Order and credit request received No Yes New/increased credit limit Material change in customer status Redo credit investigation Yes No Check new A/R total vs credit lmt Size of proposed credit limit Record disposition Large Medium Small No Extend Credit Indepth credit invest. Moderate credit invest. Minimal credit invest. Yes Set up,post A/R, ship

Credit Standards Based on five C's of Credit Character Capital Capacity Collateral Conditions Determine risk classification system Link customer evaluations to credit standards

Gathering Information credit reporting agencies, e.g.. Dun & Bradstreet credit interchange bureaus, NACM bank letters references from other suppliers financial statements field data gathered by sales reps

Credit Analysis: Applying the Standards Nonfinancial concerned with willingness to pay, character Financial ability to pay, financial ratios etc.. (other C’s of credit) Credit scoring models Example: Y = .000025(INCOME) + 0.50(PAYHIST) + 0.25(EMPLOYMT)

Emergence of Expert Systems Example of decision rule: “If gross income is equal to or grater than $20,000 and the applicant has not been delinquent and gross income per household member is equal to or greater than $12,000 and debt/equity ratio is equal to or greater than 30% but less than 50% and personal property is equal to or greater than $50,000, then grant credit.”

Factors Affecting Credit Terms Competition Operating cycle Type of good (raw materials vs finished goods, perishables, etc.) Seasonality of demand Consumer acceptance Cost and pricing Customer type Product profit margin

Cash Discounts The lower the VC, the higher the feasible discount Based on company’s cost of funds Consider timing effect when changing discounts Should be based on product’s price elasticity Higher the bad debt experience, higher the optimal discount

Practice of Taking Cash Discounts 51% of firms always took cash discount 40% sometimes 9% take discount and pay late Study found that 4 or 5 companies would be more profitable if cash discount was eliminated

A/R Management in Practice Discounts appear to be changed to match competitors, not inflation or interest rates The higher a firm’s contribution margin, the more likely the firm should be to offer discounts. A price cut is thought to have more impact than instituting a cash discount The more receivables a firm has, does not necessarily relate to use of penalty fees The greater amount of receivables does not relate to a more active credit evaluation.

Receivables, Collections, and EDI If credit approval is delayed... buyers using EDI purchase orders and JIT manufacturing can encounter serious problems. sellers can now ship within hours of receiving orders...thus seller must be able to handle electronically transmitted orders. Seller may also issues electronic invoices and be paid electronically using an EDI-capable bank so that remittance data can be automatically read by seller’s A/R system Trend is for use of data transmission to automate the cash application process

Summary Investment in A/R represents a significant investment. Key aspects outlined credit policy credit standards credit granting sequence credit limits credit terms Management of A/R is influenced by what competitors are doing not by shareholder wealth considerations. Proper use of NPV techniques can ensure that credit decisions enhance shareholder value.

JOIN KHALID AZIZ ECONOMICS OF ICMAP, ICAP, MA-ECONOMICS, B.COM. FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 1,3,4 ICAP MODULE B, B.COM, BBA, MBA & PIPFA. COST ACCOUNTING OF ICMAP STAGE 2,3 ICAP MODULE D, BBA, MBA & PIPFA. CONTACT: 0322-3385752 0312-2302870 R-1173,ALNOOR SOCIETY, BLOCK 19,F.B.AREA, KARACHI, PAKISTAN.