Big profits look great in a headline.
But a company can be profitable on paper and still run into trouble paying its bills next month.
Working capital is the number that tells you whether a business can keep the lights on, and it's a quiet favorite of careful investors.
For more ways to read a company's health at a glance, the free Market Briefs newsletter breaks down the numbers every morning in five minutes.
Let's break down what working capital is, how to calculate it, and why it matters.
What Is Working Capital?
Working capital is the money a company has available to handle its short-term needs.
Think of it as a business's day-to-day cushion. It's what's left when you take everything the company can quickly turn into cash and subtract everything it has to pay soon.
In plain terms, it answers a simple question. If the bills came due in the near future, could the company cover them?
A healthy cushion means yes. A thin or negative one is a yellow flag worth a closer look.
The Working Capital Formula
The math is refreshingly simple.
| Working capital formula |
|---|
| Current assets minus current liabilities |
Working capital formula
Current assets minus current liabilities
Two terms to define, both in plain English.
- Current assets: things the company can turn into cash within about a year, like cash itself, money customers owe (receivables), and inventory.
- Current liabilities: debts due within about a year, like bills to suppliers and short-term loans.
You'll find both groups on a company's balance sheet, which lists what a company owns and owes.
The Pieces of Working Capital
A few line items do most of the work. Here's what they mean.
- Receivables: money customers owe you but haven't paid yet. Picture a lemonade stand where someone promises to pay tomorrow. That's a receivable.
- Inventory: the products a company has bought or made but hasn't sold yet.
- Accounts payable: bills the company owes but hasn't paid yet, like a water bill due in 30 days.
These pieces shift constantly as a business operates, and those shifts ripple straight into cash, which is why they show up on the cash flow statement too.
Why Working Capital Matters to Investors
Profit and cash are not the same thing. Working capital lives in the gap between them.
A company can report strong earnings while its cash gets tied up in unpaid invoices and unsold inventory. If too much money is stuck, the business can struggle even while looking profitable.
Watching working capital tells you whether a company is managing that flow well.
- Rising receivables can mean the company isn't collecting fast enough, a drag on cash.
- Ballooning inventory can mean products aren't selling.
- Smart use of payables, paying bills right on time and not early, keeps cash in the business longer.
These details are part of learning how to evaluate a company's financial health.
How Working Capital Connects to Cash Flow
Here's where it gets useful for real analysis.
Changes in working capital directly affect how much cash a business actually generates. When receivables or inventory grow, cash goes out. When the company holds onto payables a bit longer, cash stays in.
That's why working capital shows up when analysts calculate free cash flow, the real cash a business throws off after its costs.
Understanding this is what lets you go past the headline profit and see the true cash story, the foundation of methods like discounted cash flow.
Where to Find Working Capital
You can pull the numbers yourself for any public company.
The data lives in a company's 10-K and 10-Q filings, the annual and quarterly reports.
You can grab them free on the company's investor relations page or with a quick SEC EDGAR search. Find current assets and current liabilities on the balance sheet, subtract, and you're done.
After a few filings, it becomes second nature, the same way reading an income statement does.
Using Working Capital in Your Research
One number is a starting point, not a verdict.
- Compare within an industry. Different businesses carry very different inventory and payment cycles, so judge a company against its peers.
- Watch the trend. Improving working capital can signal better management. A steady decline is worth investigating.
- Pair it with other tools. Working capital works best next to metrics like the P/E ratio and return on equity.
No single ratio tells the whole story. Strong investors look at the full picture, the way they do with value investing.
If this level of digging isn't for you, that's fine too. Owning a broad index fund skips company-by-company analysis altogether.
The Bottom Line on Working Capital
Working capital is a company's short-term financial cushion: current assets minus current liabilities. It shows whether the business can comfortably cover what it owes soon.
It's a quick, powerful health check that goes deeper than profit. A solid cushion suggests stability. A thin one is a reason to dig.
Add it to your toolkit and you'll read businesses more like an owner than a spectator, which is exactly the mindset behind smart stock research.
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Profit gets the headlines. Working capital keeps the doors open.

