|
With End of Year Looming, It's Time
To Prepare For Year-End Statements
By Jim Jordan
With the end of 2005 looming hard
on the horizon, it's time for contractors to begin thinking
about their year-end financial statements. It's these statements,
after all, that determine whether surety companies and banks
continue to have confidence in a contractor's ability to manage
his or her operations and show a profit.
 |
|
Jim Jordan is
director of construction services for Dallas/Fort Worth-based
Weaver and Tidwell LLP.
|
For a privately owned company, and most contractors are privately
held, the process should begin with company owners looking
first at their personal finances. With the help of a CPA,
owners should make certain their finances can be presented
in a timely, accurate and favorable fashion. This is important
because surety companies often require owners of privately
held businesses to personally guarantee bond lines. Therefore,
personal statements actually support the company and should
include pertinent information on personal mortgages, investments,
bank accounts, credit cards bills, loans to family, auto loans
and such. It is especially important in the preparation of
personal financial statements that any financial transactions
with the company are shown on both the personal statement
and company statement.
Before tackling company statements, however, there's always
homework to be done. This is where a CPA who specializes in
construction accounting can provide the necessary guidance.
Your CPA can determine whether there have been any recent
changes to tax laws or accounting principles that impact your
company. This year, for example, one of the biggest changes
affecting contractors' financial statements is FIN 46, a new
interpretation issued by the Financial Accounting Standards
Board.
FIN 46 is a new accounting principle, not a law. Prior to
this updated interpretation, a company was expected to show
on its financial statements any outside entity in which it
held a majority of the voting interests. FIN 46, however,
extends the requirement to include variable interest entities,
or VIEs. These are defined as "any legal structure used
to conduct activities or hold assets,'' and include non-market-driven
leases; certain service contracts; forward contracts to buy
or sell assets, guarantees of another entity's assets, subordinated
debt, and swaps or other derivatives.
FIN 46 is complex and may have a significant impact on a
company's financials. You should seek your CPA's advice in
applying and interpreting FIN 46.
Before year's end, company owners should also focus on getting
all change orders signed. Having change orders signed, particularly
those that are material to your financial statements, will
help eliminate reporting problems. Your CPA will look hard
at unsigned change orders to ensure they are properly recorded
in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
Signed change orders not only protect you and your right to
get paid, but also help produce accurate financial statements.
In addition to getting change orders signed, there are other
steps you can take to bolster working capital before the end
of the year. They include:
Postponing major purchases Particularly toward the end of
the year, owners should consider postponing the purchase of
any large assets until after the first of the year. A general
rule of thumb is to keep the debt-to-equity ratio under 3
to 1, and the interest-bearing debt-to-equity ratio under
1 to 1. Alternatively, you may want to consider leasing equipment
rather than buying it if there isn't ample working capital.
Managing cash The cleanest end-of-year statements are those
that avoid negative cash at year's end. Owners should avoid
writing checks at year's end in anticipation of receivables
that will come in the next week. Instead, they should issue
checks in the new year.
Showing low inventory Because bond underwriters usually discount
inventory by 50 percent, contractors should try to have the
lowest inventory at the end of the fiscal year. Also, if inventory
turns over numerous times, sureties should be informed of
that so the discounting can be favorably modified.
Stockholder repayments Issuing bonuses to senior executives
is always preferable to giving them a loan. Shareholder loans
make bond underwriters question a company's overall financial
acumen. The underwriters may treat such loans as a reduction
of capital if the amounts are large or have been outstanding
for a long period of time. Consequently, all loans to company
stockholders or officers should be repaid by year's end.
Underbillings At year's end, contractors should have all
jobs properly billed. A significant amount of underbillings
raises red flags with sureties and lenders, who want low underbillings
and receivables less than 90 days old. It's also important
to bill retainage as soon as possible. These steps demonstrate
you are actually managing cash flow.
Listing life insurance Sureties usually consider the cash
value of life insurance as a source of working capital. With
help from a CPA, contractors can show the cash value on their
balance sheets as "other assets,'' which improves the
overall amount of working capital.
These strategies for producing effective year-end financial
statements are fundamentals that should be enacted throughout
the year, not just in the final quarter. Owners who stay on
top of their financial accounting all year will be able to
avoid costly mistakes and omissions that invariably occur
during an end-of-year rush. It's important to avoid these
problems because end-of-year statements serve more than one
purpose: More than just financial documents, they can shed
favorable light on a company's processes. Well-organized,
proactive statements that demonstrate financial health always
instill confidence in the lenders and bond underwriters who
decide a contractor's future. These year-end statements, however,
can be difficult to produce in the eleventh hour. If the year-end
rush is beginning at your firm, remember to get started earlier
in 2006, and get help from your CPA.
|