Blog Layout

How Liquid Is Your Business?

Linda Weathers • Jun 18, 2020

Liquidity in business has nothing to do with water, milk, or juice! It describes how quickly you can sell an asset and convert it into cash. Cash is the most liquid asset of all.  Real estate, in contrast, is not quite as liquid because it could take months to sell it to a new owner.

Liquidity is important to all businesses.  It affects your credit score and how much you can borrow. It’s a measure of whether you can pay your bills on time.  It’s also one of many measures of the overall financial health of your business.

If your business sells items that take a long time to produce, liquidity can be extremely challenging and should be carefully managed. Examples include farms, wineries, breweries, automobile manufacturers, and biotech researchers.

Liquidity Ratios

A couple of financial metrics can quantify your business’s liquidity. The current ratio is computed as follows:

Current Ratio = Current Assets / Current Liabilities

The largest components of current assets include cash, cash equivalents, accounts receivable, and any other asset that is expected to be converted to cash within one year. The largest components of current liabilities include credit card balances, accounts payable, bills due, interest payable, and the amount of any loan due within one year.  You can find both current assets and current liabilities on your balance sheet.

Companies with a current ratio of less than 2:1 are considered less liquid, while companies with a current ratio of more than 2:1 are more liquid. However, current ratio values and whether they are “good” or “bad” vary by industry, so before you panic, check out your industry benchmarks.

Another measure of liquidity is the quick ratio. It measures how equipped a business is to meet its short-term obligations by taking its most liquid assets, cash equivalents, and using them to pay down current debt. Its formula is:

Quick Ratio = (Cash + Cash Equivalents + A/R) / Current Liabilities

This ratio’s value should typically be 1:1.

Emergency Fund

A good common-sense measure you can use to stay on top of your business’s liquidity is to build a healthy emergency fund.  To calculate how much you need, determine how much you typically spend each month. You can get that number by reviewing a bank statement and summing all of the withdrawals including checks paid and online withdrawals. Do this for each bank account you have and include other accounts such as PayPal if you use them for disbursements.

This should give you your total spend per month. Go back a few months to calculate an average spend per month. The farther you go back, the more accurate your average will be, especially if you have a lot of large annual payments throughout the year.

Now that you have your average spend per month, your emergency fund should be a multiple of that spend. Three months’ worth should be the minimum amount in your emergency fund. If you spend $50,000 per month on average, your emergency fund should be $150,000 at a minimum.

An emergency fund will not only make your business more liquid; it will protect you if disaster strikes. According to FEMA, 90 percent of small businesses that experience a disaster will fail within a year unless they can resume operations within five days. Having an emergency fund will increase the odds of your business continuing in spite of any hardship that may occur.

If you have questions for us about your business’s liquidity or starting an emergency fund, please feel free to reach out any time.

By Linda Weathers 15 Jun, 2023
We’re six days away from the first day of summer, and a few weeks away from the midpoint of the year. It’s the perfect time for taking a strategy check in your business to see how you’re doing for the first half of 2023 as well as to plan something fun and productive for summertime.   […] The post Five Summertime Strategies for 2023 first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 12 Jun, 2023
We’re six days away from the first day of summer, and a few weeks away from the midpoint of the year. It’s the perfect time for taking a strategy check in your business to see how you’re doing for the first half of 2023 as well as to plan something fun and productive for summertime.   […] The post Five Summertime Strategies for 2023 first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 05 Jun, 2023
The topic of artificial intelligence (AI) has been in the news quite a bit recently, and one of the reasons is the launch of an AI chatbot called ChatGPT. The GPT in ChatGPT stands for generative pre-trained transformer, which is a program that can realistically write like a human and interact in a conversational way. […] The post Cool Tech Tools: ChatGPT first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 01 Jun, 2023
The topic of artificial intelligence (AI) has been in the news quite a bit recently, and one of the reasons is the launch of an AI chatbot called ChatGPT. The GPT in ChatGPT stands for generative pre-trained transformer, which is a program that can realistically write like a human and interact in a conversational way. […] The post Cool Tech Tools: ChatGPT first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 12 May, 2023
In the last few years, the shortage of accounting professionals has grown tremendously, and many business owners are struggling to find reputable, quality accounting services. Prices for accounting services may have gone up due to this supply/demand imbalance, and they will keep going up for years to come– due to the shortage in accounting graduates […] The post 5 Ways to an Accountant’s Heart first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 28 Apr, 2023
Being in business means taking a lot of risks, especially financially, and as an entrepreneur, you deserve to be rewarded for those risks. Your pay is just one of the many benefits of your self-employment. But it’s not like the pay you get as an employee; it needs to be more comprehensive than that.   Getting […] The post Don’t Shortchange Yourself: What an Entrepreneur’s Pay Should Cover first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 20 Apr, 2023
For taxpayers collecting payments through a third-party payment platform (such as PayPal), the American Rescue Plan Act (the “Act”) established a major change to tax reporting rules to prevent businesses and contractors from hiding income through the receipt of electronic payments. Form 1099-K is the tax form issued by credit card companies and third-party payment […] The post 1099-K Reporting Changes first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 20 Apr, 2023
Drones were considered fun when they first came out, but they are far from toys. Drones have surprising benefits with extremely high return on investment to certain business owners. A drone is a robot that can fly and that is controlled by a remote device. The technology includes GPS (global positioning system) and built-in sensors. […] The post Cool Tech Tools: Drones first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 06 Apr, 2023
While spring brings a change in the weather for most locations, it also brings a number of opportunities to refresh your products and services. Spring is a great time to boost your marketing campaigns so that you can boost your business revenues. Adding the theme of spring to your marketing campaigns allows customers to see […] The post 6 Ideas to Put the Spring into Your Spring Revenue first appeared on .
By Linda Weathers 23 Mar, 2023
If you have accumulated more money in your business checking account than you really need for daily operating expenses, that is a nice problem to have! It’s time to consider putting that money to work. A business savings account might be your answer. Every bank is different when it comes to the features and benefits […] The post Do You Need a Business Savings Account? first appeared on .
More Posts
Share by: