Financial Model
Financial Model
Financial Model
By Tim Berry
President, Palo Alto Software
Copyright September, 2004
Table Of Contents
Table Of Contents
Introduction .................................................................................................. 2
Accounting Principals ...................................................................................... 3
Simplifying Assumptions............................................................................... 6
Three Main Statements ..................................................................................10
The Balance Sheet......................................................................................12
The Cash Flow ...........................................................................................15
Cash-Critical Assumptions.........................................................................18
Links, Logic, and Assumptions ........................................................................23
Other Tables ................................................................................................27
Index ..........................................................................................................29
Introduction
The Business Plan Pro Financial Model
The illustration below shows the integrated Business Plan Pro financial model. We've
been working with variations of this model since the early 1980s. It links a business
main financial statements into a logical system that facilitates financial forecasting.
The Business Plan Pro financial model depends on standard financial principals that link the
Income statement (Profit and Loss) to the Balance Sheet and Cash Flow.
As the diagram indicates, this is a system of linked tables. Linking the tables is
critical for practical forecasting, because of the way business financial projections
work and the way people deal with information. Tables must be able to stand alone
as, for example, a Sales Forecast or Personnel Plan; but at the same time, changes
in one must necessarily affect the others. When you change projected sales, that
change should reflect immediately in the Profit and Loss, Cash Flow, and in most
cases the Balance Sheet as well.
The financial model is based on established financial principles including standard
accounting, double entry bookkeeping, and the underlying importance of the
fundamental accounting equation: assets = liabilities + capital. It also depends on
understanding the difference between planning vs. accounting.
The model runs on the three main projected statements: Income, Cash Flow, and
Balance. It also depends on some logical links between these statements; the most
important are the cash-sensitive links used to estimate behavior of receivables,
payables, and inventory.
Accounting Principals
The Financial Principles
The Business Plan Pro financial model respects the principles of proper accrual
accounting. It has to -- without that, it can't do the financial analysis people expect.
Ratios would be wrong, and Cash Flow would be wrong. This financial model respects
all of the following basic principles:
1. Based on Standard Accrual Accounting. The standard accounting method,
called Accrual Accounting, is the accounting method that matches expenses
incurred by a company with the revenue it generated during a particular
period of time. Tax authorities and bookkeepers deal with accounting as
either accrual or cash based accounting. Cash based is easier, but accrual
accounting gives a more accurate picture of cash and profits.
Repaying debts doesn't affect Profit and Loss (although there might be
a change in future interest payments. Interest is deductible and
therefore does affect Profit and Loss).
Purchasing goods as inventory (goods you are going to sell later) increases
your Inventory as a Current Asset on the pro forma Balance Sheet, but
doesn't affect your Cost of Goods Sold until the goods are actually sold, which
could be months later.
Delivering goods to a customer is a sale, whether the goods are paid for or
not. Profit and Loss records a sale. However, if they aren't paid for on
delivery, then the sale is a sale on credit, and the unpaid amount goes into
the Balance Sheet as Accounts Receivable.
Cash-based is easier, but accrual accounting gives a more accurate picture of cash
and profits. Business Plan Pro can do either; accrual based accounting is the
standard.
There are no Accounts Payable. The Accounts Payable row no longer appears
in the Balance Sheet. The Payments Details table no longer appears.
There are no Sales on Credit, and no Accounts Receivable. All sales are cash
sales.
These small changes set your financial projections to cash basis instead of accrual.
After making these changes, you should also make your projections with cash basis
in mind. This is a matter of inputs, specifically:
1. In your Sales Forecast, you make a sale when you receive the money, not
when you deliver the product or service. This isn't normally a problem for
cash-based businesses; if you sell everything in cash, the distinction is
irrelevant, because the transactions should occur simultaneously.
The cost of sales portion of your Sales Forecast should project your
costs as happening when you pay for them, not when you receive the
related goods or services.
2. In your Profit and Loss, your expenses should be timed according to when
you pay for them, not when you incur the debt. For example, the advertising
expense happens not when the ad appears in the newspaper, but rather when
you pay for it. The timing is when the money changes hands, not when you
agree to take on the expense, and not when it is actually delivered.
For example, a rent payment of $1,000 is a $1,000 debit to rent expense and
a $1,000 credit to the checking account. That means that rent expenses
increased by $1,000, and the checking account decreased by $1,000. The
equal amounts keep the business in balance.
Similarly, a cash sale of $10 produces a $10 credit to sales and a $10 debit to
cash. The double entry preserves the balance.
Similarly, a $10,000 loan adds $10,000 to the cash balance, an asset, and at
the same time adds the same amount, $10,000 to the liabilities. That means
assets are still equal to liabilities plus capital.
Simplifying Assumptions
Simplifying Assumptions
Because of the differences between planning and accounting, there are diminishing
returns in trying to create detailed itemized assumptions of some detail items for
years into the future. Business Plan Pro uses several simplifying assumptions to
project future financial results without getting lost in impossible future detail.
Interest rates are simple mathematics. Business Plan Pro calculates interest
expense by multiplying the outstanding balance for either current or longterm liabilities times the interest rates in General Assumptions.
Depreciation is a simple input. You don't have to guess years of future assets
data to project depreciation. Treat it as what it is, an expense, and estimate
its amount for future years.
The Balance Sheet is Summarized. You don't need all the details because this
is planning, not tax accounting.
Principal repayment, which is not deductible, affects the Cash Flow and the
Balance Sheet, but not the Profit and Loss.
One potential problem is that the bank likely calculates interest based on the
beginning balance, while Business Plan Pro calculates based on the ending
balance.
Another problem is the timing of the loan: a loan taken out on January 28
produces the same interest estimate in Business Plan Pro as a loan taken out
on January 3.
Furthermore, Business Plan Pro takes a loan received at any time during the
second, third, fourth, or fifth year of a plan and calculates its average balance
as ending balance plus beginning balance divided by two. Since the beginning
balance was zero, that calculation divides the loan amount by half, for
planning purposes. That means that interest is figured as if the loan were
taken out on June 30, the middle of the year, regardless of whether it was
planned for the first month or the last month.
Government tax authorities set strict rules for when and how assets can be
depreciated. These rules are not always logical.
The formulas cannot be applied to groups of assets; each asset generally has
its own set of rules, according to which type of asset it is.
An educated guess is a better option. If you take a percent of assets value per year,
based on past years depreciation, that is a good option. If you do not have past data
to use, then ask somebody who does. Ask your accountant. In the worst case, you
can take 10% of assets value per year and not go too far wrong.
It starts with the Pro Forma Profit and Loss, or Income Statement. This
statement incorporates sales, Cost of sales, operating expenses, and Profit. In
most cases it should show sales less cost of sales as Gross margin , and gross
margin less operating expenses as profit before interest and taxes (also called
gross profit, and contribution to overhead). Normally there is also a projection
of interest, taxes, and net profits.
The Pro Forma Cash Flow is the most important of the three main pro
forma statements. Businesses run on cash. No business plan is complete
without a Cash Flow plan. Some would call it a Cash Plan.
The Pro Forma Balance Sheet is the third of the main three: Aside from
cash and income, there is the balance of assets, liabilities, and capital.
The three statements depend on some very important conceptual links between
them. The Profit and Loss depends on the Balance Sheet for debts that affect
interest. The Balance Sheet depends on the Profit and Loss for earnings, and on
the Cash Flow for many other financial transactions that affect cash but not profits.
These pro forma statements are automatically linked up and pre-programmed in the
Business Plan Pro and Cash Compass software. Any changes made to any of the
statements are set to automatically record correctly in all others.
10
The standard Profit and Loss table is arranged the way bankers and accountants expect to see it.
Business Plan Pro gets the sales and direct cost of sales on the Income Statement
from the Sales Forecast. The payroll information comes from the Personnel Plan.
Interest expenses are determined by liabilities balances and interest rate
assumptions.
The Income Statement can be much more complex than the illustration here. Many
Income Statements divide expenses into categories, such as General and
Administrative Expenses, Sales and Marketing Expenses, and others. Many Income
Statements show "Other Income," also called Non-operating Income.
11
The pro forma Balance Sheet shows assets, liabilities, and capital, which is the financial position of a
company at a certain date. A pro forma Balance Sheet is normally summarized, with major categories
summed instead of itemized in detail. On this point it is not like the accounting statement Balance
Sheet, which itemizes information from the past.
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Net profit and depreciation come from the Profit and Loss.
Accounts receivable, accounts payable, and inventory are calculated from the
separate Payment Details, Receivables Details, and Inventory Details
tables.
Changes in other assets and liabilities come from the Cash Flow table
because they need to be entered into the Cash Flow first and then absorbed
into the Balance Sheet.
Starting balances come from either the Start-up table or Past Performance. Other
changes, such as new borrowing or debt repayment, or new capital or dividends, or
changes in other assets and liabilities, come from assumptions typed into the cash
flow first. For example, when you borrow money you set the borrowed amount into
the cash flow, and the balance changes automatically.
Ultimately, the business model has to treat its pro forma statements very much like
you are used to treating financial statements in standard accounting and reporting;
Balance Sheet items in the plan mean exactly what they mean in reporting past
results. In the initial balance, the software recalculates retained earnings as a plug
amount, forcing retained earnings to make sure that assets are always equal to
capital plus liabilities. Retained earnings remain unchanged through the 12 monthly
columns, then at the end of the year the software moves earnings into retained
earnings.
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The Cash Flow table focuses on money flowing in and out of the business, regardless of profits or
losses.
The Business Plan Pro cash flow logic is based on a direct cash flow, listing cash
received, then cash spent, and then summing at the bottom to calculate Net Cash
Flow. Conceptually the Cash Flow reconciles the Profit and Loss with the Balance
Sheet; the difference is Cash Flow. The direct cash flow method is generally
preferred over the indirect cash flow, which starts with net income and adds back
depreciation.
The Cash Flow is the most important of the three main statements because cash
flow is different from profits, and much more important. Profits are not cash. A
business spends cash, not profits.
Cash from operations depends on three critical assumptions, related to three critical
estimates: Accounts Payable, Accounts Receivable, and Inventory. Each of these
three components has its own separate table.
Receiving investment
Selling assets
Expenditures
Expenditures begin with Cash Spending, which comes from the Payment Details
table. Cash spending normally includes payroll and payroll taxes, but might also
include any other payment obligation a business chooses to pay immediately.
The following row shows payments of Accounts Payable. Business Plan Pro calculates
these automatically from assumptions and estimates included in the Payment Details
table.
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In the next section of user-data-input rows, Business Plan Pro includes the many
kinds of balance-related business transactions that are not included in the Profit
and Loss, but absorb cash.
For example:
Repaying loans
Purchasing assets
Paying dividends
Cash in a business plan is not bills and coins; it is checking account balance.
It includes liquid securities. It is the most vital resource in your business.
Changes in Balance Sheet items can have a huge impact on your Cash
Flow. Companies can and do go broke while making profits. If all your cash is
in inventory and accounts receivable, for example, you can be broke and
profitable at the same time.
Although the following rules do not make sense in every case, with the way the
numbers work, accept these rules:
Every dollar of increase in your accounts receivable means one dollar less of
cash. If you do not believe that, pull a dollar out of your wallet and loan it to
a friend.
Every dollar of increase in inventory means a dollar less of cash. Sure, that
can be cancelled by a dollar of increase in accounts payable, but you get the
point.
How can this be? Simple logic. Your Profit and Loss statement ignores the real cash
implications because Profit and Loss doesn't record whether you were paid for your
sale; it is just recorded as a sale. Your cash balance, however, does change -- it isn't
cash until you receive the money. Similarly, Profit and Loss doesn't distinguish
whether you paid for all your costs and expenses, or not. Therefore, the changes in
balance items mean changes in cash.
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Cash-Critical Assumptions
Cash-Sensitive Assumptions
The cash projections of a normal business depend especially on three key factors:
Inventory, which you can estimate automatically using the Inventory Detail
table. If you do not have your plan set for inventory, in the plan settings,
then Business Plan Pro hides the inventory and sets the balance to 0. If you
do have inventory, then Inventory is in your Balance Sheet and the
estimation formulas are in the Inventory Details table.
Although your cash flow normally includes many other rows and assumptions, these
three lines in the Balance Sheet drive your projected cash flow up or down more
than most other elements. Recognizing how these balances influence the Cash
Flow, the Business Plan Pro cash methodology uses the balance predictors to
calculate the Cash Flow table as a result of the balances.
TIP: CASH BALANCE AS A SUMMARY INSTEAD OF A DETAIL
Because a business plan needs to summarize instead of exploding into detail, Business Plan Pro ignores
the subtle differences between cash, checking, and liquid securities. However, you can show interest
income in the Extraordinary Items row at the bottom of the Profit and Loss table.
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The Payment Details table calculates Accounts Payable using assumptions for Payment Delay in
Days and Cash Spending.
The software uses several relatively simple assumptions:
1. Payment Delay in Days is an educated guess, an estimate. Most businesses
wait at least 30 days before paying a bill. You type this estimate into the
appropriate cell.
2. Business Plan Pro calculates the estimated ending Accounts Payable balance
as a function of the estimated payment delay in days and the business
obligations. For example, a business that waits 30 days to pay bills will have a
month's worth of bills in Accounts Payable at the end of the month. A
business that waits 15 days will have half a month's bills in payables at the
end of the month. A business that waits 60 days will have two months' bills in
payables.
3. Cash Spending is another educated guess. A business pays some of its
obligations immediately, without leaving them to wait in Accounts Payable for
any time. For example, most businesses pay their payroll immediately. Since
these amounts are never included in Accounts Payable, they affect other
calculations.
4. Business Plan Pro uses other assumptions in other tables to calculate New
Obligations Incurred automatically. The table shows the details. New
obligations include non-depreciation expenses, interest, taxes, non-inventory
direct costs of sales, and inventory purchase.
With those calculations available, the Payment Details table shows the flow of
Accounts Payable from month to month with a simple row-by-row equation:
Accounts Payable = Previous Balance + New Obligations - Cash
Payments - Payments Made
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Business Plan Pros Receivables Details table brings together important assumptions on Collection
Days and Sales on Credit and uses them to calculate receipt of money owed on sales on credit.
The illustration shows how Business Plan Pro calculates Accounts Receivable from
two logical assumptions:
1. Estimated Collection Period is an educated guess. The default is 60 days, but
actual payment days vary by business and by industry.
2. Sales on Credit % is an educated guess about what percent of a business'
sales will be made on credit. A good general rule is that sales to consumers
are usually in cash, but sales to businesses are almost always on credit.
Credit does not mean credit cards or checks, which are considered cash sales.
With these two assumptions determined, Business Plan Pro calculates Accounts
Receivable automatically. It uses past sales on credit and collection days to calculate
money received, and then a simple formula calculates the ending Accounts
Receivable balance:
Accounts Receivable = beginning balance + sales_on_credit- payments
received
To provide an override for special cases, Business Plan Pro allows a user to override
its estimated payments received with any number for payments received. When this
override is used, the rest of the calculations remain intact. Therefore you can
manage special cases by direct input of the amounts received.
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Estimating Inventory
For companies that manage inventory, it can be an important component of Cash
Flow. Business Plan Pro uses the Inventory Details table, shown in Figure 7 below,
to calculate Inventory and Inventory Purchase.
The Inventory Details table tracks projected levels of inventory and inventory purchase. It applies to
companies that manage inventory.
The calculations depend on two relatively simple estimates:
1. Months of Inventory on Hand: In the top row of the table, estimate how
many months' worth of inventory, on average, the business keeps on hand.
This can be less than 1, as in .5 for half a month, or .25 for one-fourth of a
month, on average.
2. Minimum Inventory Purchase: Different businesses have different realistic
minimum purchase values when they purchase inventory.
Using these two estimates, plus assumptions from the Sales Forecast about Direct
Costs of Sales, Business Plan Pro is able to calculate inventory usage and inventory
purchase automatically.
However, as with other key estimates, there is also an override facility for special
cases. A user can assume a higher or lower inventory purchase by typing that
assumption directly into the green data entry cell.
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The Business Plan Pro Premier also produces an indirect cash flow estimate that is also a Sources and
Uses of Cash statement. There are no inputs because it uses assumptions typed into the main cash flow
table.
The Indirect Method and Sources and Uses of Cash produced by the Premier
Version are optional and additional; they are not required for normal business
planning
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New loans go into the Cash Flow table in the upper section, as sources of
cash.
Interest, which is an expense deductible against income, goes into the Profit
and Loss statement. Business Plan Pro calculates interest automatically.
Principal repayments go into the Cash Flow table in the lower section, as
uses of cash.
Some people are confused by the concept of separating the payment into interest
and principal. A common example, at least in the United States, is when you make
payments on a mortgage: most lending institutions clearly separate payments into
interest and principal components. Even if you write a single check each month to
repay the mortgage loan, the payment is divided into interest and principal.
REPAYMENT SCHEDULE
If you do not have documentation on repayments, your local bank, a standard financial worksheet, or
even a financial calculator can give you the detailed repayment schedule to use with Business Plan Pro.
If you understand how to program spreadsheet formulas, you can also use the built-in Principal Payments
function (PPMT). An example is provided in the Expanded Principal Payments Formula section.
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The example here shows how the PPMT function calculates the principal payment portion of debt
repayment. The formula shows a payment made for the 41st month (40+plan_month) of a 120-month
payment schedule for a loan amount of $300,000.
Figure 8 shows this function in use for the calculation of principal repayments of
long-term debt. In that illustration, the edit bar shows the PPMT function as applied
to cell G31, the selected cell. That formula is:
=PPMT(long_term_interest_rate/12,40+Plan_Month,120,-300000)
120 is the number of payments. This is specific information for your loan,
your business situation. In this example, the loan involved is for five-year
terms.
-300000 is the amount of the loan principal, but with a negative sign. This is
the repayment amount, which is why it is negative. The cash flow implication
is a negative $300,000 in this case, because there is a $300,000 loan to be
repaid.
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Index
Other Tables
Other Tables
The phrase pro forma, as in Pro Forma Income Statement or Pro Forma Cash
Flow, means projected. An Income Statement is a common financial statement, the
one showing profit or loss. A pro forma Income Statement (Profit and Loss Table)
is a projection of future results, an educated guess, or an estimate.
Accountants, academics, bankers, financial analysts, and other sophisticated
business people will use this terminology to distinguish between accounting
statements and the projections in a business plan.
The most important pro forma statements are the Profit and Loss (Income
Statement), the Balance Sheet, and the Cash Flow. The Business Plan Pro
financial model also includes:
The Sales Forecast and Personnel Plan tables, which provide information
to the Profit and Loss.
The Start-up and Start-up Funding tables which provide starting balances
to the Balance Sheet for start-up businesses.
The General Assumptions table, which holds assumptions for interest rates
and tax rates.
Sales Forecast
Forecasting is more art than science. Think of it as educated guessing. Like the
weather forecast, it is a combination of knowing as much as you can about
conditions and guessing what they mean for the future. You can do it. It may be
hard to forecast, but it is even harder to run a business without forecasting.
The standard Sales Forecast in Business Plan Pro is simple. It has a group of rows
for Sales, and a group of rows for Cost of Sales. Both of these sum to totals that
reappear in your Profit and Loss table.
Personnel Plan
The Personnel Plan in standard Business Plan Pro is simple. It has a group of rows
for either individuals or groups of individuals, and a summary and totals that
reappear in your Profit and Loss table as Wages and Salaries, or Payroll.
Start-up Table
The Start-up Table summarizes start-up costs for a new business, including startup expenses and start-up assets. In the Business Plan Pro financial model, these
become part of the starting balances on the Balance Sheet.
27
Index
Start-up Funding
The Start-up Funding table is for start-ups. It sets the starting balances for the
Balance Sheet for cash, liabilities, and capital.
Past Performance
The Past Performance table in Business Plan Pro sets the starting balances in the
financial model for ongoing companies. Start-ups use the Start-up and Start-up
Funding tables instead.
General Assumptions
The General Assumptions table in Business Plan Pro has a small but specific
function. It holds the assumed interest rates for both current and long-term debt,
and the assumed tax rate. These rates are applied to liabilities balances to calculate
debt, and to profit before taxes to calculate taxes.
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Index
Index
A
Accounting ......................... 3, 4, 5, 7
Accounts Payable ......... 11, 16, 17, 18
Accounts Receivable ...........11, 17, 19
Accrual accounting ......................... 3
B
Balance Sheet . 11, 17, 18, 19, 20, 24,
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C
Cash Flow ....1, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
23, 24
Cash Spending ..................14, 18, 23
Cash-basis accounting .................... 3
Critical Factors... 1, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19,
20
Current Asset ....................11, 14, 16
D
Depreciation............................. 7, 21
E
Earnings ...........................10, 13, 16
F
Financial principals .................. 3, 4, 8
I
Income.................................... 1, 10
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