Companies Dramatically Slowed Payments to
Suppliers While Disrupted Demand Caused Inventory to Reach
Record Levels; Cash-on-Hand and Debt Both Also Rose to
Record Levels
The pandemic drove significant changes in working capital
performance among the 1000 largest non-financial U.S. companies in
2020, according to new research from The Hackett Group, Inc.
(NASDAQ: HCKT). Drops in revenue and cost of goods sold were seen
in many industries, and this was a major factor affecting overall
working capital performance, the survey found. But companies also
dramatically slowed payments to suppliers, and disrupted demand and
unsold products drove inventory to higher levels. In addition,
companies increased their cash on hand by 40% to protect themselves
from the impact of the pandemic, and continued to accrue debt at
record levels, with debt rising by 10% year-over-year. Capital
expenditures also fell to record low levels, as companies cut
spending and conserved cash in anticipation of further market
uncertainty.
Days Payable Outstanding (DPO) was the main working capital
shift evident in 2020, rising by 7.6%, with typical companies now
taking more than 62 days to pay suppliers, an all-time high. Days
Sales Outstanding (DSO) and Days Inventory Outstanding (DIO) also
rose to all-time highs. DSO increasing by 3.8% to 41.5 days, and
DIO rose by 7.1% to 54.4 days.
The Hackett Group’s research identified a working capital
improvement opportunity of more than $1.2 trillion among the
companies surveyed. Upper quartile companies now convert cash more
than 3x faster than typical companies (15.7 days versus 46.4 days).
Top performers collect from customers 41% faster (29.0 days versus
48.8 days), hold less than half the inventory, (29.4 days versus
62.5 days) and pay suppliers 56% slower (76.7 days versus 49.3
days). The largest year-over-year shift was in payables, where the
performance gap between top quartile and median companies increased
by 10 percentage points in 2020.
Overall, the Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC), a standard measure of
working capital performance, deteriorated by 2% in 2020, driven by
increases in inventories and receivables. But excluding the oil and
gas industry, which faced special challenges because of the fall in
oil and gas prices, CCC actually improved by 4%. Performance also
varied widely in other industries. Commercial closures, lockdowns,
and stay at home orders impacted many industries, driving
deterioration in working capital in many industries, including
airlines (903% year-over-year CCC deterioration), hotels and
recreation (47% deterioration), and railroads and trucking (25%
deterioration). But pandemic-related shifts in demand allowed
companies in some industries to see improvements in working capital
performance. These included household and personal care (113%
year-over-year CCC improvement), media (106% improvement) and
Internet and catalog retail (65% improvement).
The survey also found that cash on hand increased by 40%
year-over-year, the first significant increase in a decade, as
companies sought to safeguard against continued uncertainty, and in
some cases prepare for potential opportunities. Debt continued its
long-term upward climb, driven by low interest rates and available
credit, increasing 10% year-over-year. Debt has risen by 67% since
2015. The pandemic also drove companies in many industries to cut
capital expenditures, with Capex declining by 10%.
The Hackett Group’s annual working capital survey is featured in
June/July issue of CFO Magazine. A summary of The Hackett Group’s
2021 Working Capital Survey findings is available on a
complimentary basis, with registration, at this link:
http://go.poweredbyhackett.com/uswcspg2106sm
“Liquidity was of crucial importance as companies responded to
the pandemic, driving companies to conserve cash and increasing
debt, to put themselves in a better position to extend terms to
customers, support suppliers, and weather unforeseen changes in
market conditions,” said Craig Bailey, Associate Principal,
Strategy & Business Transformation, The Hackett Group. “On
payables, we saw many companies simply forced their suppliers to
take 30-day term extensions. But some were able to support weaker
suppliers to protect their supply chain. On the inventory side,
companies in many industries saw dramatic revenue drops, and
responded by consolidating their offerings or otherwise simplifying
their mix of products.”
“The pandemic has also driven significant changes in consumer
buying habits,” said Bailey. “Customers have leaned heavily on
e-commerce this past year, and looking forward, it’s hard to
predict if or when traditional demand patterns and buying habits
will come back. Companies need to foster greater agility, so they
can dial production up or down to match demand, and also shift
sales channels as necessary, moving more business to e-commerce if
customer demand warrants it.
“Inventory management will also be key. There’s a lot of
uncertainty going forward, and companies that have greater ability
to manage inventory levels will be in a better position to respond
quickly to market shifts. But inventory has historically been a
difficult area for companies to optimize, as different parts of a
company, like sales or manufacturing, often have competing
priorities and goals in terms of inventory.”
The Hackett Group Working Capital Survey and Scorecard
calculates working capital performance based on the latest publicly
available annual financial statements of the 1,000 largest
non-financial companies with headquarters in United States, sourced
from FactSet/FactSet Fundamentals. The survey takes an
industry-based approach to ranking companies according to the four
key working capital metrics Days Sales Outstanding (DSO), Days
Inventory Outstanding (DIO), Days Payables Outstanding (DPO) and
Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC). For each industry the companies are
ranked according to overall CCC days. Companies are classified
according to the FactSet industry classification system, using data
sourced from FactSet. For purposes of the survey and presenting the
results we have grouped certain industries together. Historical
comparisons within the survey are made on a like for like
basis.
About The Hackett Group
The Hackett Group® (NASDAQ: HCKT) is an intellectual
property-based strategic consultancy and leading enterprise
benchmarking firm to global companies, offering digital
transformation including implementation of leading enterprise cloud
applications, workflow automation and analytics that enable digital
world class performance.
Drawing from our unparalleled IP from nearly 20,000 benchmark
studies with the world’s leading businesses – including 93% of the
Dow Jones Industrials, 91% of the Fortune 100, 80% of the DAX 30
and 55% of the FTSE 100 – captured through our leading benchmarking
platform, Quantum Leap®, and our Digital Transformation Platform
(DTP), we accelerate best practices implementations.
More information on The Hackett Group is available at:
www.thehackettgroup.com, info@thehackettgroup.com, or by calling
(770) 225-3600.
Cautionary Statement Regarding “Forward Looking”
Statements
This release contains “forward looking” statements within the
meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 as amended and
Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
Statements including without limitation, words such as “expects”,
“anticipates”, “intends”, “plans”, “believes”, seeks”, “estimates”
or other similar phrases or variations of such words or similar
expressions indicating, present or future anticipated or expected
occurrences or outcomes are intended to identify such forward
looking statements. Forward looking statements are not statements
of historical fact and involve known and unknown risks,
uncertainties and other factors that may cause the Company’s actual
results, performance or achievements to be materially different
from the results, performance or achievements expressed or implied
by the forward looking statements. Factors that may impact such
forward looking statements include without limitation, the ability
of Hackett to effectively market its digital transformation and
other consulting services, competition from other consulting and
technology companies who may have or develop in the future, similar
offerings, the commercial viability of Hackett and its services as
well as other risk detailed in Hackett’s reports filed with the
United States Securities and Exchange Commission. Hackett does not
undertake any duty to update this release or any forward looking
statements contained herein.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210715005120/en/
Gary Baker, Global Communications Director - (917) 796-2391 or
gbaker@thehackettgroup.com
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