Current Asset Adjustments
Definition
Signed cash effect of period-over-period changes in current assets — accounts receivable, prepaid expenses, deposits, and other short-term assets. Positive when assets are converting back to cash (AR collections, prepaid expenses being consumed); negative when assets are growing and absorbing cash (AR balance up, new prepayments made). Half of the `finance.net_working_capital_adjustment` rollup. Common pitfall: a one-off enterprise prepayment to a vendor (e.g. 12-month infra commit) shows up here as a large negative without the P&L showing the cost yet — flag it explicitly so the board does not read deterioration where there is none.
Why it matters
Surfaces the cash impact of growing receivables and prepayments separately from operating spend — important when DSO is moving or large prepaid commitments are taken.
How it's calculated
-(Δ accounts_receivable + Δ prepaid_expenses + Δ other_current_assets) for the period. The negative sign converts the balance-sheet direction (asset increase = cash decrease) into a signed cash adjustment. How to interpret it
A sustained negative trend usually means AR is growing faster than collections (DSO lengthening) — pair with sales-side bookings and ARR to confirm. Industry folk-wisdom (not citation-grade): the cash drag from a growing AR book typically peaks late in the year when annual contracts billed in Q4 land as Q1 receipts.
Source
imboard Editorial
Stage relevance
Typically owned by
Related KPIs
Signed cash effect of period-over-period changes in current liabilities — accounts payable, accrued payroll/taxes/bonuses, deferred revenue from customer prepayments, and other short-term liabilities. Positive when liabilities grow and absorb less cash than the matched expense suggests (e.g. AP balance growing means vendor cash payments lag); negative when liabilities are being paid down faster than they accrue. Deferred revenue is the most powerful component in SaaS — a large annual prepayment received increases deferred revenue and supplies cash now against expense recognized later. Common pitfall: a board reading this as straight cash improvement misses that deferred revenue must still be earned out, and a stretched AP balance signals supplier strain. Best practice: footnote large components (deferred revenue, accrued bonus) separately.
Signed net effect on cash of changes in current assets and current liabilities — receivables coming in (positive), payables going out (negative), prepaid expenses (negative when paid, positive when burned down), and accrued liabilities (positive when accrued, negative when settled). The rollup of `finance.current_asset_adjustments` and `finance.current_liability_adjustments`. Common pitfall: at early stage this is dominated by payroll-cycle noise and is near zero — once the company adds enterprise contracts with annual prepayments or 60-day net terms, this can swing 1–3 months of burn either direction. Becomes material at Series A+; ignored before that.
Unrestricted cash adjusted for near-term working-capital effects — i.e. the cash that is actually deployable after accounting for receivables coming in, payables going out, and accrued obligations crystallizing in the next reporting period. More conservative than `finance.total_unrestricted_cash` because it nets out the cash a healthy AR/AP cycle is already promising or claiming. The board reads this as the "real" cash position when working capital is material to the business (typical at Series A+, when AR/AP cycles get sizeable). Common pitfall: at early stage AR is small and AP is mostly payroll/SaaS, so this collapses to unrestricted cash — once enterprise deals or 60-day net terms appear, the gap widens fast.
Itemized list of working-capital adjustments with explicit sign-prefix driving the additive-vs-subtractive multiplier — e.g. "+ AR collected: $250k", "− Prepaid infra: $80k", "+ Deferred revenue: $600k". The line-item basis for `finance.net_working_capital_adjustment` and its child KPIs (current_asset_adjustments, current_liability_adjustments). The signed-prefix UI convention prevents the most common working-capital reporting bug — sign-flips that double-count or invert the cash effect. Common pitfall: lumping unrelated items into a single "other working capital" line loses the diagnostic value; break out the top 3–5 components.
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