Unlocking Trapped Cash: Strategies to Manage Your Cash Conversion Cycle and Working Capital

For any business, no matter the size, cash flow is the lifeblood of operations. While profitability is a key indicator of success, it doesn’t tell the full story. The gap between reported profit and available cash often determines if a business can meet its short-term obligations, reinvest in new opportunities, and withstand economic shifts.
To best optimize this cash flow, and set your business up for sustainable growth, it’s important to look beyond income statements to understand how cash moves through the stages of production and sales. An important metric to measure this is the Cash Conversion Cycle. By understanding the mechanics of this cycle, you can identify where capital is becoming trapped on your balance sheet and how to unlock it to become working capital to fuel your business.
Demystifying the Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC)
In its simplest form, the CCC tracks the journey of a dollar from the moment it’s spent on production or inventory to the moment it’s collected from a customer. The shorter the conversion time, the higher the likelihood of efficiency and liquidity.
The CCC is a straightforward calculation made of three core components:
- Days Inventory Outstanding (DIO): This measures the average number of days your company holds its inventory before selling it. A high DIO means cash is tied in unsold goods, increasing storage costs and risking reduced demand. The goal is to keep this number low without running out of product.
- Days Sales Outstanding (DSO): This is the average number of days it takes to collect payment from customers after making a sale. A high DSO indicates tied capital, leading to a strain on cash flow. Meanwhile, a lower number shortens the payment process, giving you quicker access to cash.
- Days Payable Outstanding (DPO): This reflects the average number of days it takes to pay your own suppliers. A higher DPO can be advantageous, as it allows you to hold on to your cash longer. However, extending DPO too far can damage supplier relationships.
The final calculation from these components equates to the CCC which reveals the health of your company’s working capital management:
CCC = DIO + DSO – DPO
A business with a long CCC may be profitable on paper but can face significant liquidity challenges. This is why managing cash flow effectively increases business stability and longevity.
Finding Where Working Capital Gets Trapped
Inefficiencies in the CCC cause working capital to become “stuck” in various parts of your operations, limiting your ability to reinvest in your business.
- In Inventory (High DIO): Excess inventory is one of the most common places for cash to be trapped. This can happen if you overestimate demand or “front-load” inventory in anticipation of price increases, tying up significant capital in goods that are sitting on a shelf.
- In Accounts Receivable (High DSO): When customers are slow to pay, your cash is trapped in invoices. While offering credit can be a competitive advantage, a lengthy collection period means your business has delivered value without receiving payment. This directly impacts your liquidity.
- In Premature Payments (Low DPO): Paying suppliers earlier than necessary reduces your DPO and shortens the period you have access to your cash. While it’s important to maintain a healthy supplier relationship, overly aggressive payment schedules can needlessly constrain your working capital.
Unlocking Liquidity Solutions
Recognizing where cash is trapped is the first step. The next is implementing strategies to release it. Financing tools can improve liquidity, support growth with minimal new debt, strengthen supplier relationships, and better manage volatility that comes with seasonal business cycles.
- Working Capital Loans offer options for a variety of needs by creating funding to manage inventory levels and bridging cash flow gaps that arise from shipping times or production cycles, helping you better manage your DIO. These are also useful
during seasonal fluctuations by allowing you to strategically purchase
stock in bulk or at discounted rates without straining cash reserves.
- Accounts Receivable Management and Financing directly addresses a high DSO. This converts your outstanding invoices into capital, accelerates cash inflow, and improves liquidity. This can be done through a combination of techniques including automated invoicing, report reviews to identify overdue accounts, and Account Receivables Discounts and Financing.
- Accounts Payable Management and Financing focuses on your DPO strategy. It allows you to offer early payment to your suppliers, strengthening your relationships, while extending your own payment terms with your financial institution through techniques such as Supply Chain Financing, freeing up your cash for a longer period. This can include consolidated payments to reduce transaction costs and improve efficiency.
- Documentary Trade Instruments like Import and Export Letters of Credit and Standby Letters of Credit provide payment security to your suppliers in case of unforeseen disruptions. This assurance can help you negotiate more favorable terms, such as a longer DPO, and mitigate risks associated with international trade in the case of importers. Similarly, exporters can reduce their DSO by discounting drafts created under usance Letters of credit.
Liquidity Solutions in Action: A Case Study
If a regional automotive seat manufacturer operates with a production cycle of 45 days and historically waits 90 days to be paid by its customers, it creates a combined DIO and DSO of 135 days. At the same time, the manufacturer pays its raw‑material suppliers in 60 days, resulting in a 75‑day CCC. To improve liquidity, the company implements two working‑capital optimization strategies:
- Accounts Receivable Management and Financing allow the manufacturer to accelerate payment on a portion of its receivables. The company reduces the average DSO, from 90 to 60 days.
- Accounts Payable Management and Financing allow for negotiation for an additional 20 days with suppliers extending the DPO from 60 to 80 days average while still enabling suppliers to be paid in a timely manner.
By combining these strategies, the manufacturer reduces its CCC from 75 days to 25 days; meaning the company no longer waits more than two months to recover its cash investment. Instead, it only needs to finance a smaller portion of its operating cycle, decreasing reliance on traditional debt, reducing financing costs, and strengthening its overall liquidity position.
Understanding and actively managing your CCC is a strategic initiative for building a more resilient and efficient business. By optimizing how cash moves through your operations, you unlock the capital already invested in your company and position it for future growth.
At WSFS, our Trade Finance team offers more than a suite of products; we serve as strategic partners. Contact our team to begin addressing areas of concern within your CCC and unlock the potential for sustainable growth and resilience.
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