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18

Jun

2008

Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 3: Debt Service and Investment

Cash Flow Analysis and Projections, SurvivalWare "How to"
3 Comments »

Two key components of your cash flow are 1) what happens to your debt (new borrowings, repayments, interest) and 2) spending money on stuff that doesn’t show up on the income statement right away (Investment / Capital Expenditures).

This is part 3 of a 5 part series on how to create a cash flow projection using SurvivalWare and the generic financial model that comes with it.

  1. Getting familiar with the Forecast Tool
  2. Sales and Expenses
  3. Debt Service and Investment
  4. Working Capital
  5. Other Cash Flow

Debt Service

There is where you put assumptions about new borrowings, principal repayments, and interest payments.

You may not separate the interest expense out on your books by category of debt. I’ve seen a lot of companies with one interest expense account on the Income Statement, but then maybe 5 or 6 loan accounts on the Balance Sheet. If this is the case, the model won’t calculate a good historical interest rate for you. You’ll have to estimate what it is for each category of debt; or just calculate one rate overall and use that same rate for all categories.

NOTE:

Borrowings are entered as POSITIVE NUMBERS.

Principal repayments are entered as NEGATIVE NUMBERS.

Interest is entered as an ANNUAL INTEREST RATE for each category of debt.

Example – Credit Card Debt

If you plan to pay off $5,000 in credit card debt in July, 2008: click on that cell, enter -5000.

Entering credit card repayment

After you hit ENTER, the value is accepted by the grid, and the model updates the calculated values such as “(Princ Repay) – Total”, “Credit Card Debt – Balance”, and “Total Debt.”

Line items affected by Credit Card repayment

Scroll down a little more to enter the “Interest Rate” for your credit card debt. Typing an asterisk (*) before the number indicates you want to use the same number for all remaining months.

Entering Interest Rate assumptions

The Interest Rate is entered as an annual percentage rate. You should use a whole number (e.g. 23.99 not 0.2399 to indicate 23.99%). The model divides by 12, and applies this monthly rate to the prior month’s ending balance to compute Interest Expense for each month.

Result of Interest Rate applied to last month\'s balance

Investment / Capital Expenditures

This is where you enter planned capital expenditures such as Equipment or Vehicles. You also need to enter the depreciation roll-off for your existing fixed assets.

Here is an example of a $20,000 equipment purchase in July 2008. We type the number “20,000” in the “5 Yr Life” category. The model calculates the “Cash Flow from Investments” as a negative number (a cash outflow), and shows the impact on Depreciation and Net Fixed Assets as you scroll down.

Entering Capital Expenditures

If you are leasing the equipment, you would skip this section and just enter the lease payments in one of the Expense categories. (There are 5 “Other Expense” line items at the send of the expense section for this purpose).

If you are borrowing some or all of the money, you would enter the purchase price in this section in the month of purchase, and then enter the amount borrowed as a positive number in the Debt Service section.

Related Posts

  1. Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 5: Other Cash Flow
  2. Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 4: Working Capital
  3. Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 2: Sales and Expenses
  4. Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 1: the Forecast Tool
  5. How to guide – using the SurvivalWare Cash Planner

Tags: Capital Expenditures, Cash Flow Analysis, Cash Flow Projections, Debt Service, Financial Projections, Investment, SurvivalWare

on Wednesday, June 18th, 2008 at 11:17 am and is filed under Cash Flow Analysis and Projections, SurvivalWare "How to". You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

3 Responses to “Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 3: Debt Service and Investment”

  1. Doing Projections in SurvivalWare - Part 1: the Forecast Tool « says:
    June 18, 2008 at 11:21 am

    [...] Debt Service and Investment [...]

  2. Doing Projections in SurvivalWare - Part 2: Sales and Expenses « says:
    July 16, 2008 at 1:52 pm

    [...] Debt Service and Investment [...]

  3. Blog | SurvivalWare.com says:
    June 7, 2010 at 4:05 pm

    [...] Debt Service and Investment [...]

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« Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 2: Sales and Expenses

Doing Projections in SurvivalWare – Part 4: Working Capital »

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