Chapter 5 Cash Management - STD
Chapter 5 Cash Management - STD
Chapter 5 Cash Management - STD
CASH MANAGEMENT
Dr. Nguyen Quynh Tho
Chapter Outline
1. Tracing Cash and Net Working Capital
2. The Operating Cycle and Cash Cycle
3. Understanding Float
4. Managing Cash Collection and Disbursement
5. Investing Idle Cash
6. The BAT and Miller-Orr Model
Part 1.
Tracing Cash
and Net Working Capital
Balance Sheet Model of the Firm
Current
Liabilities
Current
Assets Net Working Long-Term
Capital
Debt
• Current Assets are cash and other assets that are expected to be
converted to cash within the year.
Cash
Marketable securities
Accounts receivable
Inventory
• Current Liabilities are obligations that are expected to require cash
payment within the year.
Accounts payable
Accrued wages
Taxes
Defining Cash in Terms of Other Elements
Long-
Net Working Fixed
+ = Term + Equity
Capital Assets
Debt
Other
Net Working Current
= Cash + Current –
Capital Liabilities
Assets
Raw material
Cash
purchased Finished goods sold
received
Order Stock
Placed Arrive
s
Time
Accounts payable period
Cash cycle
The Operating Cycle and the Cash Cycle
Accounts
Cash cycle = Operating cycle – payable
period
● Inventory:
○ Beginning = 200,000 Ending = 300,000
● Accounts Payable:
○ Beginning = 75,000 Ending = 100,000
●Collection float
○Checks received increase book balance before the bank credits the
account
● Size of float depends on the dollar amount and the time delay
● Suppose you mail a check each month for $1,000 and it takes 3 days
to reach its destination, 1 day to process, and 1 day before the bank
makes the cash available
● What is the average daily float (assuming 30-day months)?
Example: Measuring Float
Suppose the average daily float is $1,000 with a weighted average delay of 3 days.
Example: Cost of Float
●Cost of float – opportunity cost of not being able to use the money
●Suppose the average daily float is $3 million with a weighted
average delay of 5 days.
○What is the total amount unavailable to earn interest?
○What is the NPV of a project that could reduce the delay by 3 days if the
cost is $8 million?
Part 4.
Managing Cash Collection and
Cash Disbursements
Managing Cash Collection
●Your company does business nationally, and currently, all checks are sent to
the headquarters in Tampa, FL. You are considering a lock-box system that
will have checks processed in Phoenix, St. Louis and Philadelphia. The Tampa
office will continue to process the checks it receives in house.
○Collection time will be reduced by 2 days on average
○Daily interest rate on T-bills = .01%
○Average number of daily payments to each lockbox is 5,000
○Average size of payment is $500
○The processing fee is $.10 per check plus $10 to wire funds to a centralized
bank at the end of each day.
Managing Cash Disbursements
●Controlling disbursements
○Zero-balance account
Costs in dollars of
holding cash Trading costs increase when the firm must sell
securities to meet cash needs.
Opportunity Costs
Trading costs
C* Size of cash balance
The Baumol-Allais-Tobin (BAT) Model
C
–
2
The opportunity cost of holding C/2 cash is
C
– ×R
2
1 2 3 Time
The BAT Model
As we transfer $C each
period we incur a trading
C cost of F.
If we need $T in total
–
C
over the planning period
2
we will pay $F times.
T
C –
1 2 3 Time
The trading cost is –
T ×F
C
The BAT Model
C T
Total cost R F
2 C
C
Opportunity Costs R
2
T
Trading costs F
C
C* Size of cash balance
2T
C* F
R
The BAT Model
C2 TF
R T F C 2
2
2 R
2TF
C*
R
The BAT Model: Example
●The firm allows its cash balance to wander randomly between upper and lower
control limits.
$ When the cash balance reaches the upper control limit U, cash is invested
elsewhere to get us to the target cash balance C.
U
When the cash balance
reaches the lower control limit,
L, investments are sold to raise
cash to get us up to the target
C cash balance.
Time
The Miller-Orr Model Math
● Borrowing
○Borrowing is likely to be more expensive than selling marketable
securities.