Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Nevada Pharmacy Cash Flow Instruments and Financial Discount Rates

By Brad MacLiver
Authorship and profile at Google


When a NV pharmacy is considering selling a cash flow instrument such as the pharmacy’s receivables, or a pharmacy business note, the price the Nevada pharmacy owner receives will reflect how much time is involved before the Buyer/Investor/Funder of the cash flow instrument will recoup his principal investment and the desired rate of return the Investor needs to make it desirable to take the risk of buying the pharmacies cash flow instrument.

To entice an Investor to shift the risk of holding the cash flow instrument from the pharmacy owner in NV to the Investor, there is typically a financial incentive for the Investor. The incentive is the rate of return, which is required to compensate for the Investors perceived risk. The risk is based on the credit of the cash flow instrument’s Payor, previous payment history, seasoning, interest rate, and other variables. Discount rates may change depending on the circumstances of the cash flow instrument, the economy, etc.

If the Nevada pharmacy owner or an investor could take the cash flow instrument to the bank and cash it in at face value, the asset would hold more value. However, since this can’t happen the risk of holding the cash flow instrument makes it worth less than face value.

Time Value of Money:
The concept of cash being more valuable to have a dollar today instead of tomorrow is based on the Time Value of Money (TVM). Most business people are aware of the TVM and how it is fundamental to both personal and corporate decision making, but to make sure we are on the same page, we will cover the basics of TVM.

TVM assumes that money earns interest over time. Therefore, as the cliché says time is money, and because of this we can compare money at different points in time that have different values and call them equal.

An example: If $3.50 today earns 10% interest, it will be worth $3.85 at the same time next year. Therefore, $3.50 today = $3.85 next year = $9.08 ten years from now.

Within the same reasoning the reverse is true. An investor will not pay $1.00 today for a dollar that won’t be collected until next year, or 10 years from now. Today’s dollar will be discounted to reflect risk, inflation, the strength of the economy, etc.

Along with interest rates and principal amounts, a cash flow instruments such as Nevada Pharmacy Business Notes, are originated with a certain time period. The TVM can be looked at, as if it were on a sliding scale. The earlier in time the Note is paid off, the smaller the amount becomes. When the Note is paid early, you don’t get to collect the compounded interest amount, which would have accumulated if you had waited the full time period. The Note was already written and it has already had its terms set. Unlike a loan where the rate of return needed to cover any risks, this risk is added to the loan amount. An investor is unable to go back to the buyer of your business and retroactively change the terms of the note. so the investor will look at only a portion of the note that is going to be purchased and subtract the rate of return necessary to justify the risk. This is practice called Discounting, and the size of the discount is contingent on the risks.

Example:

If you sell something for a $4.50 with 4% interest, equal payments received over a 20 year period, you would expect to receive $9.86. However, should the note be paid in full in 10 years you will only have collected $6.66. You are not collecting the other $3.20 because you are no longer risking anything (you are not earning it). If you want an investor to advance you the $9.86, you will no longer have any risk because you have transferred it to the Investor. To compensate the Investor for accepting the risk of holding the note, the Investor will discount the note, and pay you an amount equivalent to the time and risk involved.

The price you receive when selling your note will be the discounted rate according to the basic TVM principals minus the amount that allows an investor to justify the risk.                                

If a note is a length of 3, or more years, it may be beneficial for you to sell only a portion of the note. Because the payments from a month in the 5th year will hold less value than payments collected this year, it is beneficial to you to only sell the number of months that you need to obtain the cash that meets your current financial needs. You can always sell more payments at a later date if you need additional funds. Determine what cash you really need and we will calculate the number of months we will purchase to meet your needs.

Although it involves a much shorter period of time, understanding discount rates is the same when selling a Nevada pharmacy’s accounts receivables.


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