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SESSION 5 FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
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INTRODUCTION To obtain bonding and access to capital, contractor’s finances must be well managed Session explains the basics of accounting systems used by construction firms First part focuses on construction accounting methods, second part on reporting standards
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PART A: ACCOUNTING
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES Identify an accounting system
Become familiar with methods that meet the needs for bonding, estimating, and reporting
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COMPONENTS OF ALL ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS
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FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Balance sheet Statement of earnings
Changes in equity Cash flow Notes U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - Community Planning and Development U.S. Small Business Administration
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REPORT RELATIONSHIPS
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GAAP METHOD OF ACCOUNTING
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CONSTRUCTION METHODS ACCOUNTING
Note: Methods different from GAAP
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PERCENTAGE COMPLETION METHODS
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PERCENTAGE OF COMPLETION
Revenue recognized as received Retention booked throughout the project Expenses recognized as obligated Estimated profits are distributed over time Profit based upon projected revenues and expenses U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - Community Planning and Development U.S. Small Business Administration
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COMPLETED CONTRACT Revenue earned at completion
Expenses booked at completion Revenues and expenses are known Useless for financial management May create large swings in income U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - Community Planning and Development U.S. Small Business Administration
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CONSTRUCTION ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS
Hardware Software/Cloud Based Features to look for: Estimating Davis-Bacon Payroll Job Cost and Requisitions Cost Control
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TOP 7 PROGRAMS 2014 What do you use? Sage300 Dexter & Chaney Sage100
Foundation Jonas Computer Ease Viewpoint What do you use?
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CONSTRUCTION ESTIMATING ACCOUNTING BASICS
Your calculated historic mark-up Purchased databases Negotiated rates
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ESTIMATING SOFTWARE SUBROUTINES
Proposal generation Cost database Labor and material Visual assemblies Project reporting “What if?” analysis
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JOB COST LEDGER Provides breakdown of construction costs on income statement May provide a breakdown of revenues on the income statement Costs are broken down by: Job Phase (optional) Cost code Cost type U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - Community Planning and Development U.S. Small Business Administration
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JOB COST LEDGER JOB COST LEDGER JOB # PHASE # COST CODE MATERIALS
LABOR
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COST REPORTING VERSUS COST CONTROL
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COMPONENTS OF COST CONTROL SYSTEM
MANAGEMENT BY EXCEPTION: Investigating only those situations in which actual results differ significantly from planned results. Strong job cost and equipment tracking Costs must be current and up to date Uses “management by exception” Higher management is to mainly target and address “strategic” plans and decisions! Follows established procedures Data must be readily available
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TOP 7 PROGRAMS 2014 SAGE (Timberline) Construction Estimator Tally
Pro Estimator Clear Estimates
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ACTION PLAN Take 5 minutes to: Consider software options and needs
Identify choice Incorporate into Action Plan
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PART B: FINANCIAL REPORTING
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INTRODUCTION In this session, you will learn key financial ratios, self-evaluation compared to benchmarks, and financial issues (red flags) for sureties
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES Understand basic financial ratios
Identify bond underwriting requirements Identify financial issues
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SURETIES LOOK FOR… Acceptable method of accounting
Related party transactions Litigation/contingent liabilities Totals and ratios: assets, debt, etc. Backlog/billings over/under Disclosure of an activity U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - Community Planning and Development U.S. Small Business Administration
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SPECIALTY TRADE CONTRACTORS
KEY FINANCIAL RATIOS GENERAL CONTRACTORS SPECIALTY TRADE CONTRACTORS CURRENT RATIO 1.1+ 1.5+ [CURRENT ASSETS] / [CURRENT LIABILITIES] CASH RATIO 0.2+ 0.35+ [CASH + CASH EQUIVALENTS + INVESTED FUNDS] / [CURRENT LIABILITIES] WORKING CAPITAL TURNOVER [SALES] / [WORKING CAPITAL]
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DEBT-TO-EQUITY RATIO
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EXAMPLE TOTAL ASSETS $825,000 CURRENT ASSETS $748,000
CURRENT LIABILITIES $525,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES $650,000 EQUITY $175,000 SALES $2,000,000 CASH + CASH EQUIVALENTS $150,000 & INVESTED FUNDS
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WORKING CAPITAL
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WORKING CAPITAL TURNOVER
Measures gross contract sales compared to working capital Is working capital being leveraged to produce revenue? $2,000,000 = 8.97 $223,000
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DEBT-TO-EQUITY Measures equity capital leverage
Total liabilities (debt) equity $650,000 = 3.71 $175,000
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RED FLAGS FOR SURETIES Late financial statements
Errors in financial documents Insufficient supporting schedules Change in CPA (good/bad) Increases in non- construction activity U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - Community Planning and Development U.S. Small Business Administration
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SELF EVALUATION Take 10 minutes to review firm’s reports in comparison to benchmarks How can your firm improve reports?
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NEXT STEPS Link Session material to Action Plan elements as necessary
U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development - Community Planning and Development U.S. Small Business Administration
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RESOURCES These resources provide more information on Accounting:
IRS: Construction Industry Audit Technique Guide (2009) National Association of Surety Bond Producers ( Surety Information Office (
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