Working Capital (Net Working Capital)
Definition
Working capital, or net working capital (NWC), is the difference between a company’s current assets and its current liabilities. It measures short-term liquidity — a company’s ability to fund operations and meet near-term obligations.
Why it matters
- Indicates short-term financial health and operational efficiency.
- Helps assess whether a company can pay employees, suppliers, and other bills without raising new capital.
- Guides decisions about investing, borrowing, and managing inventory and receivables.
Formula
Working capital = Current assets − Current liabilities
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Expressed as a dollar amount. Positive working capital means current assets exceed near-term obligations; negative working capital means liabilities exceed assets.
Components
Current assets
Assets expected to convert to cash within 12 months, typically including:
* Cash and cash equivalents
* Short-term investments
* Accounts receivable (net of allowances)
* Inventory (raw materials, WIP, finished goods)
* Prepaid expenses
* Other short-term assets (e.g., short-term deferred tax assets)
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Current liabilities
Obligations due within 12 months, typically including:
* Accounts payable
* Wages and accrued payroll
* Current portion of long-term debt
* Accrued taxes
* Dividends payable (authorized)
* Unearned (deferred) revenue
* Other short-term liabilities
Positive vs. Negative Working Capital
- Positive working capital: indicates the company likely has the resources to cover short-term debts and can support operations or invest in growth.
- Negative working capital: suggests potential liquidity stress and difficulty meeting obligations. In some business models (e.g., fast-turnover retail with supplier financing), short-term negative working capital can be sustainable, but prolonged negative NWC is risky.
Limitations
Working capital is useful but has caveats:
* Snapshot in time: balances change constantly, so the metric can be outdated quickly.
* Composition matters: a high NWC driven mainly by receivables or obsolete inventory may not be truly liquid.
* Asset devaluation: receivables can become uncollectible and inventory can become obsolete or lose value.
* Hidden or unrecorded obligations can distort the calculation.
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Special considerations
- Needs vary by industry: manufacturing and long-cycle businesses typically require higher working capital than daily retail operations.
- High working capital isn’t always positive — it can signal excess inventory, idle cash, or missed financing opportunities.
- Forecasting working capital involves projecting sales, production, collections, and payables to anticipate cash needs.
- The current ratio (current assets ÷ current liabilities) complements NWC by showing the relationship as a ratio rather than a dollar amount.
How companies can improve working capital
- Accelerate collections (shorten receivable terms, incentivize early payment).
- Manage inventory more efficiently (just-in-time, better forecasting).
- Negotiate extended payment terms with suppliers.
- Convert short-term assets into cash or avoid unnecessary prepayments.
- Refinance or restructure short-term debt into longer maturities.
Example
A company reports $147 billion in current assets and $118.5 billion in current liabilities. Its working capital is:
$147B − $118.5B = $28.5B
This indicates roughly $28.5 billion in short-term resources available after covering current obligations.
Explain Like I’m Five
Working capital is the money a business has left after setting aside what it must pay soon. If a company can easily turn what it owns into cash to pay bills due this year, it has healthy working capital.
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Short FAQs
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How is working capital different from profit?
Working capital measures short-term liquidity (assets vs. liabilities due within a year); profit reflects earnings over a period after revenues and expenses. -
Is higher working capital always better?
No. Excessive working capital can mean idle cash or excess inventory that could be invested more productively. -
Can negative working capital be okay?
Sometimes, if the business model generates quick cash (e.g., customers pay immediately while suppliers are paid later). Persistent negative NWC, however, is a warning sign.
Bottom line
Working capital is a fundamental measure of a company’s short-term liquidity and operational health. It’s most useful when examined alongside the composition of assets and liabilities, industry norms, and trends over time.