Cash forecasting isn't just about numbers. It's about knowing if your business will survive next month. A good forecast sees trouble coming before it hits. A bad one leaves you blind.

Liquidity buffering works hand in hand with forecasting. Think of it as your company's rainy-day fund. You need the right size buffer, not too big and not too small. Too much cash sitting idle drags down returns. Too little cash means you could miss payroll.

The tables below break down the core methods, tools, and trade-offs. Use them as your practical reference.

Key-Points
Why Forecasting and Buffering Matter Together

Forecasting predicts future cash positions. Buffering protects against forecast errors. They are two sides of the same coin.

Without a forecast, you don't know your buffer need. Without a buffer, even a small forecast miss can cause a crisis.

Core Forecasting Methods

Two main approaches dominate treasury forecasting. One looks at receipts and payments directly. The other starts from the balance sheet and adjusts. Most large firms use both for different time horizons.

A retail chain forecasts daily store sales to project weekend cash needs. That's the direct method in action. They track exactly when money comes in from card processors.

A holding company uses the indirect method for its five-year plan. They start with projected net income and add back depreciation. It gives a rough picture without tracking every transaction.

Table 1: Direct vs. Indirect Cash Forecasting Methods
FeatureDirect MethodIndirect Method
Starting PointExpected cash inflows and outflowsBalance sheet and income statement projections
Time HorizonShort-term (days to weeks)Medium to long-term (months to years)
GranularityHigh, by business unit or bank accountLow, consolidated view
Best Use CaseDaily liquidity managementStrategic planning and debt covenant testing
ComplexityHigh data requirementsModerate, relies on accounting logic

The direct method gives you a sharp, operational snapshot. The indirect method shows the broader trajectory. You'll often hear treasurers talk about using direct methods for the next 30 days and indirect methods for the next year.

Short-Term Forecasting: The 13-Week Roll

A 13-week cash flow forecast (often called a rolling forecast) is the backbone of short-term treasury. It updates every week. You drop the week just passed and add a new week at the end.

This rolling approach keeps your view fresh. It forces you to compare what you predicted against what actually happened each week. That variance analysis improves your model over time.

A manufacturing company runs a 13-week forecast every Monday morning. Week 1 just ended with actuals coming in $50,000 below forecast. The analyst immediately adjusts the remaining 12 weeks. This tight feedback loop catches errors fast.

Table 2: Typical Inputs for a 13-Week Direct Forecast
Cash Inflow SourcesCash Outflow Uses
Customer collections (AR aging-based)Payroll and benefits
Intercompany settlementsSupplier payments (AP aging-based)
Asset sales and refundsRent and lease obligations
Investment income and maturitiesTax payments and debt service
Key-Points
The 13-Week Forecast Is Not a Budget

A budget is a target. A rolling forecast is a prediction of reality. Budgets are often optimistic. Forecasts must be brutally honest.

Variance is normal. The goal is to reduce the average variance over time, not to hit zero every week.

Liquidity Buffering Strategies

Once you have a forecast, you can size your liquidity buffer. A buffer can be cash in the bank, committed credit lines, or a mix of both. The goal is to survive a stress scenario without needing emergency funding.

Stress scenarios aren't theoretical. One major customer delays payment by 60 days. A factory goes down for two weeks. Your bank suddenly reduces your overdraft line. The buffer covers these gaps.

Table 3: Comparing Liquidity Buffer Sources
Buffer SourceCostReliability in Crisis
Cash on handOpportunity cost (low yield)Highest, immediately available
Committed credit facilitiesCommitment fees (basis points)High, but subject to covenant compliance
Uncommitted credit linesUsually no standby costLow, can be withdrawn without notice
Commercial paper (CP) backupLow issuance costVolatile, depends on market conditions
Intercompany lendingMinimal external costSubject to legal and tax constraints

During the 2020 market shock, many firms found their uncommitted credit lines were pulled by banks overnight. Only committed lines and actual cash proved reliable. This lesson reshaped buffer policies across the industry.

Sizing the Buffer: Risk and Return

How much buffer is enough? A common target is covering operating expenses for a minimum period under stress. Many firms target coverage for 30 to 90 days of outflows. The exact number depends on your access to capital markets and the stability of your sector.

Holding excess cash has a real cost. Investors expect cash to be deployed efficiently. If a company sits on too much idle cash, its return on equity (ROE) suffers. You need a clear policy to justify the buffer size to your CFO and board.

Table 4: Key Metrics for Buffer Sizing Decisions
MetricWhat It MeasuresTypical Target
Days Cash on Hand (DCOH)Cash and equivalents divided by daily operating expenses30-90 days (varies by industry)
Cash Coverage RatioCash flow from operations to current liabilitiesGreater than 0.5x
Liquidity GapForecasted inflows minus outflows over a stress periodZero or positive under stress
Credit HeadroomUndrawn committed facilities divided by total debtAt least 15-20% of total debt
Key-Points
One Buffer Size Does Not Fit All

A utility with stable cash flows can target a smaller buffer. A cyclical miner needs a much larger one. Your buffer must match your business volatility.

Always tie the buffer back to a specific, quantified risk scenario. Board members understand stories about "if X happens, we survive Y days."

Technology and Data Integration

Spreadsheets still dominate short-term forecasting in many treasury teams. But manual Excel work burns time and introduces errors. Modern treasury management systems (TMS) or even advanced ERP modules can automate data pulls from bank accounts, accounts payable, and accounts receivable systems.

Direct bank connectivity via SWIFT or APIs gives you real-time or daily balances. That means your forecast starts from an accurate actual position, not an estimate from yesterday's close. Automation frees your team to focus on variance analysis and decision-making instead of data entry.

A tech company implemented a TMS that pulls bank balances at 7 AM every day. Their forecasting accuracy improved from ±15% to ±5%. The treasury analyst now spends mornings analyzing deviations, not typing numbers into spreadsheets.

Key Takeaways

Table 5: Key Takeaways for Treasury Cash Forecasting and Buffering
Key PointWhat It MeansAction Item
Use direct method for short-termPredicts real cash flows, not accounting profitsBuild a 13-week rolling cash flow forecast by bank account
Indirect method supports long-term planningGood for capital structure and debt covenant testingUpdate an indirect model quarterly for board reporting
Buffer must match risk profileHigh volatility businesses need larger buffersStress-test your buffer using a customer concentration scenario
Cash is king, but committed lines back it upCommitted credit facilities are the second line of defenseMaintain at least 20% of facility capacity as undrawn headroom
Automation improves accuracy and speedReal-time data reduces manual errors and lagIntegrate bank APIs with your TMS or ERP within 12 months