Dangers of over trading for SMEs

Dangers of over trading for SMEs
Published: 27 September 2017
Running a start-up SME business is often a very difficult and tricky affair.

Emerging entrepreneurs face myriad challenges, which range from the first stages of coming up with a profitable business model and bankable business plan; putting the resources together to get the business off the ground ; and ultimately trying to turn the business into a success story.

However, even when one is lucky enough to get their potentially lucrative business up and running, managing the growth of that business becomes a journey fraught with many dangers, a real minefield so to say.

Some lucky businesses will hit the jackpot and will grow very fast.

However, playing in the sweetsop, and the excitement of good business prospects usually results in entrepreneurs sometimes allowing their businesses to grow faster than the business can sustain, a phenomenon that can be fatal to any start-up business. This phenomenon is called "over-trading".

Why is over-trading a dangerous phenomenon?

Over-trading often occurs as a result of a small business expanding its operations too quickly or too aggressively.

Over-trading eventually kills the business because the business often quickly enters a negative working capital cycle, wherein, if the business also happens to be financed from borrowed funds, the rapid increase in interest expenses will quickly negatively impact the net profitability and cash-flows, leading to the erosion of working capital.

This negative cycle feeds on itself and leads the business into further increased borrowings, which in turn lead to further increases in interest expenses and the cycle continues. Over-traded companies eventually face serious liquidity problems due to them running out of working capital. Over-trading can quickly overwhelm a business, leading to a quick and sudden death.

How does over-trading manifest in a business?

A business is said to be over-trading when it begins to accept orders and tries to complete those orders, but finds that fulfilment of the orders requires greater resources than the managers initially anticipated ie more people (labour), more time, more working capital or net assets - than are available to the business. This is often caused by unforeseen circumstances or events.

For example, raw material deliveries can take longer than anticipated, resulting in manufacturing of an order not being completed on time, leading to delays in delivering goods to the customer, which may eventually result in orders being cancelled and or and eventually getting downstream delays in getting customers to pay. The net result is that the business' cash-flows become severely impaired.

Over-trading is actually a very common problem, and it often happens to recent start-ups and rapidly expanding businesses. In many businesses, cash often has to be paid out of the business before cash from sales is realised. For example, wages and salaries are usually payable weekly or monthly, and there may be other expenses that need to be met promptly, such as transport, telephone expenses and rent.

Although your business may be lucky to pay input suppliers on credit, and some your customers may also pay you on credit, it usually does not take much to upset that fine balance.

It is also possible to run out of cash, even if your customers pay cash and do not have credit accounts. For example, you may have to pay suppliers quickly, perhaps even in advance, or you may have to hold stock for a long time. What matters is the amount of working capital and the timing of cash coming in and going out.

How can over-trading be avoided?

Prevention is better than cure. The first and most important step in dealing with a potential over-trading problem is to make an accurate assessment of your business's cash needs: assets and liabilities.

It is often helpful to compare the assets and liabilities of your business, as it can be useful for forecasting what your assets and liabilities will be in the future. This can be done by using either cash flow forecasting and or ratio analysis. However, for either to be effective, you need up-to-date and reliable financial records and for this, accurate record keeping is crucial.

Why is cash flow forecasting critical?

Since cash is essential to a business, a cash flow forecast is one of the most important management tools you can use. If you are expecting a rapid increase in business, an accurate cash flow forecast is vital.

This helps you predict the money coming into and going out of the business on a periodic basis and, to be effective, it therefore needs to be broken down into relevant periods - monthly, weekly, or even daily as necessary.

Such a system will tell you whether the extra demand for your products can be effectively financed from internally generated cash, or whether you need extra short-term financial support, or whether there is a real risk of over-trading. (See our next article on the basics of cash flow management.)

What are the useful indicators?

There are various ratios that need to be monitored in order to avoid over-trading. Along with cash flow forecasting, these ratios will help you understand your own business' cash needs. Forecasting future ratios is an invaluable way of predicting the effect of a rapid increase in work flow.

Working capital and quick ratio

Working capital is the difference between your business' current assets and current liabilities. Clearly, the safest position to be in is to have more current assets than liabilities, and the bigger the difference the better.

The Quick Ratio - is a similar but more demanding way of measuring cash needs. Stock is completely left out of the current assets calculation because it might take some time to turn stock holdings into cash. Only cash investments, money in the bank, cash and money owed by customers for services or products delivered are considered. A good score in the quick ratio test is usually an indication of a healthy business.

Gearing Ratio - This is the percentage of money borrowed from the bank compared with money provided by the business owners and other investors.

For example, suppose that the bank lends the business $8 000 and the shareholders have provided $12 000. The gearing ratio will be 40 percent, because the bank loan represents 40 percent of the total funds available to the business.

Gearing can help a business by boosting cash available, but it does involve borrowing potentially large sums of money usually at a cost. There is no standard set figure or safe level for gearing, because businesses differ in many respects. However, it is generally known that the higher the gearing level, the higher the financial risk that a business faces.

Because of such risks, banks are often wary of lending too much and might refuse to accept a gearing ratios of more than 50 percent.

 Dr Sanderson Abel is an Economist. He writes in his capacity as Senior Economist for the Bankers Association of Zimbabwe. For your valuable feedback and comments related to this article, he can be contacted on abel@baz.org.zw or on numbers 04-744686 and 0772463008
- zimpapers
Tags: SMEs,

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