In this episode of Corporate Finance Explained on FinPod, we break down cash flow forecasting, why profitable companies still fail, and how liquidity, not earnings, determines whether a business survives. This episode explains how companies can look strong on the income statement while quietly heading toward a cash crisis.
Many businesses don’t collapse because they’re unprofitable. They fail because they run out of cash. Understanding the differences between profit, EBITDA, and cash available is one of the most critical skills in corporate finance. This episode shows how cash flow forecasting reveals timing risk, funding gaps, and liquidity shortfalls long before they appear in reported earnings.
In this episode, we cover:
– Why profitability and EBITDA can hide serious liquidity risk
– How timing differences between revenue, expenses, and cash create dangerous gaps
– The impact of accounts receivable, inventory, capex, and debt repayments on cash flow
– How operating, investing, and financing cash flows work together
– Why companies like Apple and Walmart manage liquidity so effectively
– What went wrong at companies like WeWork, Carvana, and Boeing from a cash flow perspective
– How short-term, 13-week, and long-term cash flow forecasts prevent financial surprises
We explain why cash flow forecasting is not just a treasury function, but a core finance responsibility. By mapping cash inflows and outflows over time, finance teams can anticipate liquidity troughs, plan funding needs, and make informed decisions before cash constraints become emergencies.
This episode is designed for:
– Corporate finance professionals
– FP&A analysts and managers
– Investment banking and valuation professionals
– Finance leaders responsible for liquidity, forecasting, and capital planning
Corporate Finance Explained is a FinPod series from Corporate Finance Institute (CFI), created to make complex finance topics clearer, more practical, and easier to apply in real-world decision-making.
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