UK firms are feeling the full force of the credit crunch more keenly than
those in the US, according to research.
Professional services company
KPMG
surveyed 342 companies with revenues between £250m and more than £20bn, and
found that 76 per cent of those in the UK were feeling a high level of pressure
from stakeholders, compared to just 23 per cent of US firms. Three quarters of
UK companies are facing delayed payments from customers and reduced access to
credit, compared to just 23 and 14 and per cent respectively on the other side
of the Atlantic.
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The increased cost of credit is problematic for 71 per cent of companies in
the UK, compared to 19 per cent in the US, while 73 per cent of firms in this
country are faced with suppliers demanding early payment in comparison to only
12 per cent of stateside companies.
Of the 96 per cent of companies which use cash flow forecasting, a quarter of
those based in the UK were accurate to within 10 per cent, with 64 per cent of
US firms achieving that level of accuracy. 88 per cent of UK companies
anticipate they will have to delay or revisit refinancing plans during the next
two years.
One positive for UK firms is that just four per cent are planning on reducing
capital expenditure in that time, compared with half of US firms.
In addressing cash flow challenges, 49 per cent of all respondents claimed
they plan to negotiate longer supplier payment terms, while 46 per cent
indicated they would tighten customers' credit lines. But KPMG advisory director
Andrew Ashby claimed that such moves were short-sighted.
He said: “Adopting the same old blinkered approach of squeezing your
suppliers and delaying payments is a zero sum game where only few winners will
emerge. Companies need to be more focused on gaining improved visibility and
control of cash and to work smarter across the supply chain to create win-win
opportunities that reduce the cash cycle for all participants.”
A total of 46 per cent of all respondents are concerned the economic
environment will result in exposure to bad debt, while 84 per cent claimed cash
management was a top priority, although 25 per cent do not link executive
compensation to cash flow targets.
Ashby added: “By gaining visibility and control of cash flows, companies will
be able to identify the areas where they can generate more cash. While working
capital tends to be a large area of opportunity companies should also look at
cash generation from tax, treasury and other assets on the balance sheet.
"To drive sustainable improvement, leading companies embed cash management
into the strategic decision-making process. One way to do this is for companies
to incentivise executives to manage cash flow better. Those that do have fared
better over the past three years and expect to suffer less in the future.”
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