Corporate Credit Analysis and Selection: Balance Sheets and Cash Flow
Balance sheet and cash flow analysis matter greatly in corporate bond selection. Together, they provide insight into an issuer’s ability to meet interest and principal payments and, ultimately, into the level of support available to bondholders.
Why does balance sheet analysis matter?
A company’s balance sheet is fundamental to evaluating two key aspects of corporate bond investing: creditworthiness and default risk. Careful analysis evaluates a company’s assets, liabilities, and equity structure to determine whether a company’s finances appear robust enough to service its debt and meet its coupon payments.
Balance sheets that have elevated debt or low liquidity typically signal a greater risk of missed payments or refinancing stress. By examining these metrics, investors can better judge whether a bond’s yield adequately compensates for the level of risk being assumed.
The balance sheet also provides insight into a company’s capital structure and debt maturity profile, as well as the extent to which its liabilities are secured by hard assets. Investors should additionally consider any off-balance-sheet obligations, such as defined benefit pension deficits or derivative exposures, which may materially affect financial flexibility.
Debt maturity analysis is particularly important because heavy reliance on short-term funding or significant near-term maturities can heighten refinancing risk, especially when credit conditions deteriorate. The capital structure of a company’s debt can have a material impact on its overall risk profile, particularly if it reveals an unexpectedly high exposure to unsecured or subordinated debt. These factors can have a notable influence on spreads and credit downgrade risk.
Balance sheet analysis also sheds light on the quality of the collateral supporting a company’s secured debt. In a distressed scenario, the quality of these assets can significantly affect recovery outcomes. For example, tangible assets – such as property, equipment and inventory – often provide more predictable recoveries than intangible assets like trademarks, patents and proprietary technology. Even for unsecured bonds, asset composition can affect the amount recoverable after a default.
Few things reveal the discipline of a company’s management more clearly than its balance sheet. Prudent capital allocation, deleveraging and conservative funding strategies tend to signal financial stability, while aggressive debt-funded buybacks and rising leverage can indicate increased risk.
Given its central role in assessing a company’s resilience, balance‑sheet strength is a core input in credit rating decisions. Rating agencies rely heavily on balance sheet metrics to gauge a company’s ability to absorb shocks, service debt and survive episodes of stress.
Why does cash flow analysis matter?
While the balance sheet shows what a company owns and owes, cash flow analysis reveals whether it can actually meet its obligations. Bondholders receive their payments from cash, not from accounting earnings. A company may appear financially sound from a balance-sheet perspective, but insufficient cash generation can still pose a risk to investors.
Assessing cash flow from operations helps determine whether the core business generates sufficient liquidity to cover interest expenses, scheduled debt amortisation, lease payments, and short-term working capital needs.
Cash flow analysis also cuts through accounting ‘noise’. Unlike traditional accrual accounting, cash flow analysis can expose aggressive revenue recognition (recording revenues earlier, faster, or in larger amounts than is justified under proper accounting rules), capitalised expenses, one-off gains and non-cash adjustments. In this sense, cash flow analysis often provides a clearer view of economic reality and helps investors avoid being misled by accounting distortions.
Free cash flow (FCF) is another important consideration. Where cash flow from operations shows the cash generated by day‑to‑day operations, FCF goes a step further by accounting for capital expenditure – highlighting how much cash is left after the company funds the investment needed to run and sustain the business. Consistently negative FCF may indicate rising leverage and increased refinancing risk. Conversely, strong and stable FCF can give issuers flexibility to reduce debt, fund investment, return capital to investors, or build liquidity buffers.
Cash flow strength is therefore a key factor in credit rating assessments. All the leading ratings agencies place strong emphasis on cash flow ratios such as FCF-to-debt and EBITDA-to-interest (EBIDTA: earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation). These often carry greater weight than earnings-based metrics.
Putting it all together
Balance sheet strength and cash generation work together to determine how much protection bondholders ultimately have.
The balance sheet shows what resources a company has available, while cash flow shows whether those resources can be converted into timely payments to bondholders. A company may have a strong balance sheet but weak cash flow, appearing safe on paper, while struggling to generate sufficient cash to service its debt. The strongest corporate bond investment decisions come from integrating both balance sheet and cash flow analyses into a coherent view of financial strength, resilience and risk.