Loans & Insurance · Treasury & Growth Financing
Cash Flow, Treasury & Liquidity Management Advisory
Most businesses do not fail because they are unprofitable — they fail because they run out of cash while a profit and loss statement still looks healthy.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
Most businesses do not fail because they are unprofitable — they fail because they run out of cash while a profit and loss statement still looks healthy. At PNPC Global, we have advised businesses across India and the UAE since 1986 on treasury structuring, cash flow forecasting, and liquidity planning. We do not hand over a spreadsheet template and disappear. We build the rolling cash flow model, set the banking and surplus-deployment structure, and stay engaged month after month so that a funding gap is visible twelve weeks before it becomes a payroll crisis — not the week it becomes one.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
Cash Flow, Treasury & Liquidity Management Advisory is the professional service of structuring how a business plans, monitors, and deploys its cash — so that the company can meet every obligation as it falls due, avoid both cash shortfalls and idle surplus, and make deliberate decisions about working capital, banking relationships, and short-term investment of excess funds. It sits distinctly apart from bookkeeping and statutory compliance: this is forward-looking financial management, built around a rolling cash flow forecast, a defined treasury policy, and disciplined monitoring of the metrics that determine whether a business can honour payroll, vendor payments, loan instalments, and tax obligations on time, every time.
The core deliverable is the cash flow forecast itself — typically built on a 13-week rolling basis for short-term liquidity visibility, supplemented by a 12-month or multi-year projection for medium-term planning. This is different from a budget or a profit and loss projection: a P&L shows accounting profit, which includes non-cash items (depreciation, provisions, accruals) and excludes the timing gap between when revenue is earned and when cash is actually collected. A business can be profitable on paper and still be unable to pay its GST liability or its supplier on the due date, because the cash has not yet arrived from a customer who is paying on 90-day terms. Treasury advisory closes this gap — translating the P&L and balance sheet into an actual cash-in, cash-out timeline that management can act on before a shortfall arrives, not after.
Beyond forecasting, treasury advisory covers the structural decisions that determine a company's liquidity resilience: how much working capital financing (cash credit, overdraft, working capital demand loan) the business should carry as a standing facility versus draw on demand; how banking relationships are structured — single bank versus multiple banking versus a formal consortium; how surplus cash, when it exists, is deployed — fixed deposits, liquid mutual funds, sweep-in/sweep-out arrangements, or short-term treasury bills — rather than sitting idle in a current account earning nothing; and how foreign currency exposure is managed for businesses with export receivables, import payables, or overseas operations, including forward contracts and natural hedging strategies under RBI's foreign exchange management framework. For group structures, treasury advisory extends to intercompany cash pooling and inter-group funding arrangements, structured to be both operationally efficient and compliant with related-party transaction and transfer pricing requirements under the Income-tax Act.
The discipline behind all of this is what distinguishes a managed treasury function from ad hoc cash-watching. A treasury policy defines minimum cash buffer levels, approval thresholds for payments and investments, banking mandate and signatory structures, foreign exchange hedging thresholds, and the cadence at which cash position is reviewed — weekly for operational businesses, more frequently for businesses with volatile receivables or seasonal cash cycles. For a CA firm, this work draws directly on the same financial data used for statutory compliance — GST filings, TDS schedules, loan repayment calendars, payroll cycles — which is precisely why a firm already handling a company's accounting and compliance is positioned to build a cash flow forecast that reflects real obligations, not a generic template.
When treasury and liquidity advisory adds real value
The business has experienced — or narrowly avoided — a cash crunch where payroll, a statutory due date, or a vendor payment was at risk despite the P&L showing profit
Revenue is growing but working capital (receivables and inventory) is absorbing cash faster than the business can generate it — a classic and dangerous 'growing broke' pattern
The company has seasonal or cyclical cash flows (construction, retail, agri-processing, education, event-driven businesses) where cash surplus in some months must fund shortfalls in others
The business holds meaningful surplus cash sitting idle in a current account, with no structured deployment into interest-bearing or liquid short-term instruments
The company has export receivables, import payables, or foreign-currency loan exposure and needs a structured approach to hedge currency risk rather than reacting to each rate movement
A group of companies or an India-UAE structure has multiple bank accounts and entities, and management wants visibility and control over consolidated cash position rather than tracking each entity separately
The business is preparing for a debt facility or an equity round and needs a credible, lender-grade cash flow forecast as part of the financial case
Promoters or the finance team are spending disproportionate time manually reconciling bank balances and chasing collections instead of working from a forward-looking cash plan
When this may not be the immediate priority
A very early-stage business with minimal transaction volume and a single bank account — basic monthly bookkeeping and a simple cash register may be sufficient until complexity grows
The business already has an in-house CFO or finance controller actively running a disciplined cash forecasting and treasury process — in that case, PNPC's accounting and compliance retainer alone may be the right scope, with treasury advisory engaged only for specific structural decisions
The immediate and pressing issue is an existing loan default or overdue creditor pressure — that calls for debt restructuring or distressed-situation advisory first; treasury planning is the discipline that prevents the next crisis, not the fix for an active one
The business has no surplus cash and no material working capital cycle — a straightforward service business invoicing and collecting on short terms with minimal receivables may not need a formal treasury function yet
The requirement is a one-time cash flow projection for a bank loan application only, with no ongoing monitoring intended — a standalone CMA data / projection engagement under debt syndication advisory may be more appropriate and cost-efficient
Ad Hoc Cash Watching vs Structured Treasury Management — what changes
| Feature | Ad Hoc (No Treasury Function) | Basic Cash Tracking (Spreadsheet, Reactive) | PNPC-Structured Treasury Advisory |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forecast horizon | None — bank balance checked as needed | Often monthly, backward-looking | 13-week rolling forecast plus 12-month/multi-year projection |
| Shortfall visibility | Discovered when a payment bounces or is delayed | Sometimes visible days in advance | Typically visible 8–12 weeks in advance, giving time to arrange financing or defer non-critical spend |
| Surplus deployment | Idle in current account, no return | Occasional ad hoc FD, no policy | Structured sweep/FD/liquid-fund policy against a defined minimum operating buffer |
| Banking structure | Whatever bank the business opened first with | Reviewed rarely, if ever | Reviewed against facility needs, pricing, and consolidated group visibility |
| Foreign exchange exposure | Unmanaged — reacts to rate movements after the fact | Occasional spot conversion, no hedging discipline | Hedging thresholds and forward contract policy aligned to actual exposure, within RBI FEMA framework |
| Working capital financing | Requested reactively when a shortfall is imminent | Facility exists but utilisation is not actively monitored | Facility sized and monitored against actual operating cycle (MPBF/turnover method), drawn deliberately |
| Intercompany / group cash | Each entity manages independently, no consolidated view | Manual consolidation, delayed and error-prone | Structured cash pooling or intercompany funding policy, transfer-pricing and related-party compliant |
| Governance & review cadence | No defined review rhythm | Reviewed when a problem arises | Weekly/fortnightly cash position review against a documented treasury policy |
| Lender / investor readiness | Cash flow case built from scratch under time pressure when needed | Partially available, needs rework | Forecast already in lender/investor-grade format, ready when a raise or renewal is needed |
This table gives directional guidance only. The right level of treasury structure depends on your business's size, cash cycle volatility, banking complexity, and growth stage. A diagnostic conversation with a practising CA is the right first step to scope what your business genuinely needs.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | CA Judgment Generic Tools Never Give | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cash Flow Diagnostic — understand the current reality before building anything | We start by reconstructing the last 6–12 months of actual cash movement from your bank statements and books — not your P&L. This reveals the true collection cycle, payment cycle, and seasonal pattern, which is almost always different from what management assumes. Most businesses underestimate their receivables collection period and overestimate how much cash cushion they actually carry. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Working Capital Cycle Assessment — where cash is trapped | We map the cash conversion cycle — days inventory outstanding, days sales outstanding, days payable outstanding — and identify where cash is unnecessarily trapped: slow-paying customers, excess inventory, or payment terms that do not match the industry norm. This diagnostic frequently uncovers more available cash than a fresh loan would provide. | Week 1–2 |
| 3 | 13-Week Rolling Cash Flow Model — the core operational tool | Built from your actual receivables ageing, payables schedule, payroll calendar, statutory due dates (GST, TDS, advance tax, PF/ESI), and loan repayment schedule — not generic assumptions. This model is rebuilt weekly and rolled forward, so it is always a live 13-week view, not a static document that goes stale after week one. | Week 2–3 |
| 4 | 12-Month / Multi-Year Liquidity Projection — the medium-term view | Layered on top of the 13-week model, incorporating seasonal patterns, planned capex, expected financing events, and growth assumptions. This is the document that answers 'when will we next need financing, and how much' — well before the need becomes urgent. | Week 3–4 |
| 5 | Treasury Policy Drafting — the rules that govern cash decisions | A written policy defining minimum cash buffer, payment approval thresholds and signatory authority, surplus deployment rules (how much stays liquid, how much can go into FDs or liquid funds and for what tenor), and FX hedging thresholds if applicable. Without a written policy, cash decisions default to whoever is available that day — which is how idle surplus and avoidable shortfalls both happen. | Week 4–5 |
| 6 | Banking Structure Review — is your current setup actually serving you | We review your existing bank accounts, facility utilisation, and pricing against what the business actually needs — whether a single relationship bank, multiple banking, or a formal consortium structure is appropriate, and whether existing working capital facilities are correctly sized against the MPBF or turnover-based assessment method the lender uses. | Week 4–6 |
| 7 | Surplus Deployment Structuring — putting idle cash to work | For businesses carrying surplus beyond the defined operating buffer, we structure deployment into fixed deposits laddered against known future cash needs, liquid/overnight mutual funds for near-instant liquidity, or sweep-in/sweep-out arrangements linked to the current account — balancing yield against the liquidity the business may need on short notice. | Week 5–7 |
| 8 | Foreign Exchange Exposure Review — for exporters, importers, and cross-border businesses | We quantify actual FX exposure (export receivables, import payables, foreign-currency loan instalments), assess natural hedging already in place (matching FX inflows against outflows), and recommend a hedging policy — forward contracts, or other RBI-permitted instruments — sized to genuine exposure rather than speculative positioning. | Week 6–8, where applicable |
| 9 | Intercompany / Group Cash Structuring — for group entities and India-UAE structures | Where a client operates multiple entities — domestic group companies or an India-UAE structure — we structure intercompany funding or cash pooling arrangements that are operationally efficient and correctly documented under related-party transaction disclosure norms and the transfer pricing provisions applicable under the governing income-tax law. | Week 6–10, where applicable |
| 10 | Reporting Dashboard & Review Cadence — the discipline that keeps it working | We establish a recurring cash position review — typically weekly or fortnightly depending on business volatility — with a simple dashboard showing actual versus forecast cash position, upcoming obligations, and facility headroom. A forecast that is built once and never revisited loses value within weeks; the discipline of the review is what makes it useful. | Week 8 onward, recurring |
| 11 | Early-Warning Threshold Setting — before a shortfall becomes a crisis | We define specific trigger points in the rolling forecast — for example, projected cash falling below the minimum buffer within 6 weeks — that automatically flag management attention and give enough runway to arrange financing, defer discretionary spend, or accelerate collections, rather than discovering the shortfall the week it hits. | Ongoing from Week 8 |
| 12 | Lender / Investor-Ready Packaging — when the forecast doubles as fundraising material | The same rolling cash flow model, refined and formatted, becomes the basis for CMA data or an investor cash-runway analysis when the business needs fresh financing — so the business is never starting a fundraising conversation from a blank spreadsheet under time pressure. | As needed, ongoing |
| 13 | Quarterly Treasury Review & Policy Update — the function evolves with the business | As the business grows, seasonal patterns shift, banking relationships change, or FX exposure grows, the treasury policy and forecast model are reviewed and updated quarterly — not left as a one-time exercise that becomes stale within a year. | Quarterly, ongoing |
Realistic timeline: initial diagnostic and 13-week rolling model typically take 3–4 weeks from engagement start. Full treasury policy, banking review, and surplus/FX structuring generally complete within 6–10 weeks. Ongoing monitoring and quarterly review continue for the life of the retainer engagement. Actual timelines depend on the availability and quality of existing financial records and banking data.
Bank statements for all operating and current accounts — trailing 12 months minimum — used to reconstruct actual historical cash movement rather than accounting-period cash flow
Audited or provisional financial statements for the last 2–3 years — balance sheet, profit and loss, and existing cash flow statement if prepared
Receivables ageing report — showing actual collection patterns by customer, not just the standard credit period offered
Payables ageing report — showing actual payment patterns to suppliers and any negotiated credit terms
Existing loan sanction letters and repayment schedules for all outstanding term loans and working capital facilities
Payroll calendar and headcount cost, including any planned hiring or seasonal staffing changes
GST filing and payment schedule (monthly or under QRMP) and typical GST liability pattern from recent filings
TDS payment and return filing schedule, and advance tax instalment dates and typical quarterly liability
Rent, lease, and other recurring fixed-cost obligations with payment dates
Capex plan for the forecast period — planned equipment purchase, facility expansion, or technology investment with expected payment timing
List of all bank accounts held, across all entities if a group structure, with current balances and signatory authority
Existing working capital facility documents — cash credit, overdraft, or working capital demand loan sanction terms, limits, and current utilisation
Details of any existing fixed deposits, mutual fund investments, or other surplus deployment already in place
Bank charges and interest rate schedule for existing facilities — used to assess whether current banking terms are competitive
Sales pipeline or order book, to the extent visible, for revenue forecasting inputs beyond historical trend
Major customer contracts with payment terms, particularly for any customer representing a concentrated share of receivables
Seasonal sales pattern data, if the business has cyclical or seasonal revenue (relevant for construction, retail, education, agri-processing, and similar sectors)
Export invoices and expected realisation timeline, and import purchase orders with payment currency and timing
Existing forward contract or hedging arrangements, if any, with the bank or authorised dealer
Foreign currency loan details — currency, interest basis, and repayment schedule — for ECB or other foreign-currency borrowing
For India-UAE or other group structures — intercompany invoice and funding flow details between entities
Current payment approval process and signatory matrix, to be formalised into the treasury policy
Management's risk tolerance and minimum cash buffer preference, informing the treasury policy's liquidity thresholds
Board or promoter-level sign-off on the treasury policy once drafted, since it typically sets binding thresholds for surplus deployment and FX hedging
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnostic & Baseline | Decision to engage treasury advisory | Reconstruct actual historical cash movement from bank statements, map the working capital cycle, and identify where cash is currently trapped or under-deployed — before any forecast model is built. | Building a forecast on assumed rather than actual cash behaviour produces a model that looks credible but fails the first time it is tested against reality. |
| Model Build & Policy Design | Diagnostic complete | 13-week rolling model and 12-month projection built from real receivables, payables, payroll, and statutory calendars. Treasury policy drafted covering buffer levels, approval thresholds, surplus deployment rules, and FX hedging thresholds where relevant. | No written policy means cash decisions are made ad hoc by whoever is available — leading inconsistently to both idle surplus in some periods and avoidable shortfalls in others. |
| Structural Implementation | Model and policy approved | Banking structure reviewed and, where beneficial, renegotiated or restructured. Surplus deployed into FDs/liquid funds against the defined buffer. FX hedging arrangements set up for genuine exposure. Intercompany cash arrangements documented for group structures. | Surplus cash sitting idle in a current account earns nothing while the business may simultaneously be paying interest on a working capital facility it does not fully need — a cost that compounds every month it continues. |
| Operating Cadence | Ongoing business operations | Weekly or fortnightly cash position review against forecast. Early-warning thresholds monitored so a projected shortfall is visible 8–12 weeks ahead. Forecast rolled forward continuously rather than left static. | A forecast built once and never revisited is stale within weeks — the business reverts to reactive cash-watching, and the entire value of the exercise is lost. |
| Growth or Seasonal Inflection | Revenue growth, new customer concentration, or seasonal cycle shift | Working capital cycle reassessed as the business scales — receivables and inventory typically grow faster than cash during a growth phase. Facility limits reviewed against the new operating scale. Seasonal buffer requirements recalibrated. | The classic 'growing broke' pattern — a profitable, fast-growing business runs out of cash because working capital absorption outpaces cash generation, and no one is watching the gap until it is a crisis. |
| Financing Event | Debt facility renewal, fresh borrowing, or equity round | The maintained rolling forecast is repackaged into lender-grade CMA data or an investor cash-runway analysis — already available rather than built from scratch under time pressure. PNPC coordinates with debt syndication or equity fund-raising advisory as needed. | Starting a financing conversation without a credible, already-maintained cash flow model puts the business at a negotiating disadvantage and can add weeks to the process while the model is built reactively. |
| Stress or Downturn | Revenue shock, customer default, or macro disruption | Early-warning thresholds trigger management attention while there is still runway to act — deferring discretionary spend, accelerating collections, negotiating supplier terms, or arranging bridge financing — rather than reacting after a payment has already been missed. | Discovering a cash shortfall only when a payment bounces damages banking relationships, supplier trust, and creditworthiness — all avoidable with 8–12 weeks of advance visibility. |
| Ongoing Governance | Quarterly review cycle | Treasury policy and forecast model reviewed and updated quarterly to reflect actual business evolution — new banking relationships, changed seasonal patterns, new FX exposure, or group structure changes. | A treasury policy that is never updated becomes disconnected from how the business actually operates, and management stops trusting or using it — reverting to informal, undocumented decision-making. |
What exactly is treasury management, in plain terms?
Treasury management is the discipline of planning, monitoring, and controlling how cash moves through your business — making sure you always know, with reasonable confidence, whether you will have enough cash to meet payroll, pay suppliers, service loan instalments, and pay statutory dues on their due dates, and making deliberate decisions about what to do with any cash beyond what you need for that. It is different from accounting, which records what already happened; treasury is forward-looking — it tells you what is about to happen to your cash position over the coming weeks and months.
Why can a profitable business still run out of cash?
Because profit and cash are measured differently. Profit is recognised when revenue is earned and expenses are incurred, regardless of when cash actually changes hands. A business can show a healthy profit while a large share of that revenue sits uncollected in receivables, while inventory ties up cash on the shelf, and while depreciation (a non-cash expense) inflates reported profit relative to actual cash generated. If customers pay on 60–90 day terms but suppliers and payroll must be paid on 15–30 day terms, the business can be profitable on paper and cash-short in reality — a pattern that becomes more dangerous, not less, as the business grows and the working capital gap widens with revenue.
What is a 13-week rolling cash flow forecast, and why 13 weeks specifically?
A 13-week rolling forecast projects weekly cash inflows and outflows for the coming quarter, updated and rolled forward every week so it always shows a fresh 13-week window ahead. Thirteen weeks (roughly one quarter) is a widely used horizon because it is short enough to forecast with reasonable accuracy — you generally know your receivables, payables, and payroll obligations for the next 3 months with real precision — while being long enough to give genuine advance warning of a cash gap, enough runway to arrange financing, negotiate terms, or adjust spending before the gap arrives.
How is a cash flow forecast different from a budget?
A budget is typically an annual plan stated in accounting terms — planned revenue and expenses for the year, often by month, prepared once (or revised periodically) as a management and control tool. A cash flow forecast is specifically about the timing of actual cash movement — when money will genuinely be received and paid — and is far more granular and frequently updated, particularly in the near-term (weekly) horizon. A budget can show a healthy annual profit while the cash flow forecast reveals a tight three-week window where the business will be short of cash to fund that same profitable plan.
What is the cash conversion cycle, and why does PNPC start with it?
The cash conversion cycle measures how many days it takes for a rupee spent on inventory or operations to come back as cash from a customer — calculated broadly as Days Inventory Outstanding plus Days Sales Outstanding, minus Days Payable Outstanding. A long cash conversion cycle means cash is trapped in the business for longer, requiring more working capital financing to fund operations. Shortening it — collecting faster, holding less inventory, or negotiating longer supplier terms — frees up cash without needing a single rupee of fresh financing.
How much cash buffer should a business maintain?
There is no universal number — the right minimum cash buffer depends on the business's revenue volatility, customer concentration, seasonal pattern, and how quickly it can access emergency financing if needed. A common starting reference point discussed in practice is a buffer equivalent to roughly one to three months of fixed operating costs (payroll, rent, and other unavoidable outflows), with businesses that have volatile or seasonal revenue typically needing the higher end of that range. We calculate a specific figure for each client based on their actual cash flow volatility rather than applying a generic rule.
We have surplus cash sitting in our current account. What should we do with it?
First, confirm how much is genuinely surplus above your defined minimum operating buffer — this requires the forecast, not a guess. For the amount confirmed as surplus, options within a treasury policy typically include short-term or laddered fixed deposits (timed against known future cash needs), liquid or overnight mutual funds offering near-instant liquidity with better returns than a current account, and sweep-in/sweep-out arrangements that automatically move surplus balances into an interest-bearing instrument daily and sweep back when the current account needs funds. The right mix depends on how liquid you need the surplus to remain.
What is Maximum Permissible Bank Finance (MPBF), and why does it affect our working capital facility?
MPBF is a methodology, originating from RBI-linked lending norms, that banks use to assess how much working capital finance a business can be sanctioned, based on its projected current assets (inventory, receivables) less current liabilities (trade payables) and a stipulated margin the business must fund itself. Many banks continue to use MPBF or a turnover-based method (typically around 20% of projected turnover, subject to bank-specific norms) to size cash credit and overdraft limits. Understanding which method your bank applies — and ensuring your projected current assets and turnover figures are realistic and well-supported — directly affects how much facility you are sanctioned.
Should we use a single relationship bank or spread our banking across multiple banks?
A single relationship bank offers simplicity, a deeper relationship that can help in a pinch, and easier consolidated visibility — but concentrates risk and negotiating leverage with one counterparty. Multiple banking spreads facility risk and can improve pricing through competition, but adds administrative complexity and, without a formal intercreditor understanding, can create complications if the business ever faces financial stress and each lender pursues its own security independently. The right structure depends on facility size, business complexity, and whether the company anticipates needing facilities beyond what a single bank's exposure limit for one borrower typically allows.
How does PNPC forecast cash flow for a business with seasonal revenue?
We build the forecast around the actual historical seasonal pattern from the business's own data — not a smoothed average — so that predictable low-cash months are visible well in advance and the surplus from peak months is deliberately retained (not spent or distributed) to fund the trough. For genuinely seasonal businesses — construction, education, agri-processing, retail with festive-season concentration — this seasonal-aware forecasting is often the single highest-value part of the engagement, because a generic monthly-average model badly misrepresents the actual cash timing risk.
What is a treasury policy document, and does our business really need a written one?
A treasury policy is a short written document setting the rules for cash management decisions: the minimum cash buffer to maintain, who can approve payments above what threshold, how surplus cash may be deployed and for what maximum tenor, whether and how foreign exchange exposure should be hedged, and the cadence of cash position review. Without it, these decisions are made informally and inconsistently by whoever is handling finance that week — which is precisely how idle surplus and avoidable shortfalls both occur in the same business, in different periods.
We export goods and get paid in US dollars or other foreign currency. How does treasury advisory help with that?
We quantify your actual foreign exchange exposure — expected receivables in foreign currency against the timing they are due — and assess how much of that exposure is already naturally hedged by any foreign-currency payables or loan instalments you also have. For exposure that remains unhedged, we recommend a hedging approach — commonly forward contracts booked with an Authorised Dealer bank under RBI's foreign exchange management framework — sized to genuine, known exposure rather than a speculative view on where the rupee is headed. The goal is to protect margins from adverse currency movement, not to try to profit from currency speculation.
Is currency hedging speculative, or is it a legitimate risk management practice?
When sized and structured against genuine underlying exposure — an actual export receivable or import payable due on a known date — forward contracts and other RBI-permitted hedging instruments are a standard, legitimate risk management practice, not speculation. It becomes speculative when a business books hedges beyond its actual exposure, essentially taking a directional bet on currency movement. RBI's foreign exchange regulations distinguish between hedging genuine underlying exposure and speculative positions, and Authorised Dealer banks require evidence of underlying exposure before booking most forward contracts for resident entities.
How does treasury advisory work for a company with multiple group entities, including one in the UAE?
For group structures, we build a consolidated cash view across entities — even though each entity maintains its own books and bank accounts — so management can see the group's true liquidity position rather than a fragmented, entity-by-entity picture. Where genuine surplus exists in one entity and a genuine need exists in another, we structure intercompany funding arrangements that are properly documented, priced at arm's length where required, and disclosed as related-party transactions under the Companies Act and, for cross-border flows, structured within FEMA's framework for intercompany transactions and reported where applicable.
Does PNPC only build the forecast once, or is this an ongoing service?
Both models exist and clients choose based on their need. A one-time engagement builds the initial diagnostic, the 13-week model, the 12-month projection, and the treasury policy — useful for a business that wants the framework and can maintain it internally afterward, or that needs a credible forecast for a specific financing event. An ongoing retainer engagement includes the weekly or fortnightly rolling update, early-warning monitoring, and quarterly policy review — which is where the real value compounds, because a forecast that is never updated loses accuracy within a few weeks.
How much does treasury and cash flow advisory typically cost?
PNPC agrees a professional fee in writing before engagement begins, structured around the specific scope — a one-time diagnostic and model build, or an ongoing monthly retainer that includes rolling forecast updates, periodic review meetings, and treasury policy maintenance. The fee depends on business complexity — number of entities, banking relationships, foreign exchange exposure, and transaction volume. We confirm the exact structure in a written scope and fee letter before any work begins; we do not quote a standard figure without understanding the specific business.
What data does PNPC actually need from us to start building a cash flow forecast?
At minimum: 12 months of bank statements across all operating accounts, recent financial statements, a receivables and payables ageing report, and the payroll and statutory compliance calendar (GST, TDS, advance tax due dates). For businesses with existing loan facilities, the sanction letters and repayment schedules. For exporters/importers or group structures, the additional foreign exchange and intercompany details listed in our document checklist. Most of this overlaps significantly with what we already hold for clients on our accounting and compliance retainer, which is one reason the forecast tends to be more accurate and faster to build for existing PNPC clients.
Can treasury advisory help us reduce our dependence on working capital loans?
Often, yes — though not always entirely. A structured review of the cash conversion cycle frequently reveals opportunities to reduce working capital financing need: faster receivables collection, renegotiated supplier payment terms, reduced excess inventory holding, or better-timed capex. For businesses whose working capital cycle is inherently long — certain manufacturing or project-based businesses, for example — a properly sized facility remains appropriate and necessary; the goal there shifts to ensuring the facility is correctly sized and efficiently utilised rather than eliminated.
What early warning signs does the rolling forecast actually catch?
A properly monitored rolling forecast typically flags: a projected cash balance dropping below the defined minimum buffer within the forecast window, a large concentrated payment (a loan instalment, a big supplier payment, or an advance tax instalment) landing in a week where collections are also projected to be light, a customer whose payment pattern is drifting later than their historical average (an early sign of that customer's own cash stress), or a facility utilisation trending toward its sanctioned limit. Each of these, caught 6–10 weeks ahead, gives genuine time to act — collect faster, defer discretionary spend, or arrange additional facility headroom.
Is treasury advisory relevant for a small or mid-sized business, or only for large companies?
It is arguably more valuable for small and mid-sized businesses, which typically have far less cash buffer relative to a single missed collection or unexpected expense than a large company does, and which usually do not have a dedicated in-house treasury or finance function to build and maintain this discipline internally. Large companies often have a CFO and treasury team performing this function in-house already; SMEs are precisely the segment that benefits most from an external CA firm building and maintaining the same discipline at a scale appropriate to the business.
How does treasury advisory relate to debt syndication or equity fund raising advisory?
They are closely related but distinct. Treasury advisory is the ongoing, forward-looking discipline of managing cash and liquidity as a continuous function. Debt syndication and equity fund raising advisory are transaction-specific engagements to raise a defined amount of new capital. In practice, the rolling cash flow model built under treasury advisory becomes a core input — often close to the finished product — for the CMA data or investor cash-runway analysis needed for a financing transaction, which is why businesses on an ongoing treasury retainer are typically far better prepared when a financing need arises.
What happens if our cash flow forecast shows a shortfall coming in a few months?
Identifying it early is the entire point — it converts a crisis into a planning problem. Depending on the specific situation, the response might include accelerating collections from slow-paying customers, deferring non-critical capex or discretionary spend, drawing down an existing but underutilised working capital facility, arranging a fresh facility or facility enhancement with adequate lead time (rather than under emergency pressure, which weakens negotiating position and pricing), or, for a structural rather than temporary gap, revisiting the underlying business model or working capital terms with customers and suppliers.
Do statutory due dates (GST, TDS, advance tax) really move the needle on a cash flow forecast?
Significantly, yes — and this is one of the most common gaps in a cash flow model not built by a CA firm already familiar with the client's compliance calendar. GST liability (typically due by the 20th for monthly filers), quarterly advance tax instalments, and monthly or quarterly TDS payments are large, predictable, recurring cash outflows that a generic cash flow template often omits or estimates poorly. Missing or underestimating these in the forecast defeats the purpose of the exercise, since these are precisely the obligations that create penalty and interest exposure if cash is not available when they fall due.
Can treasury advisory help if we already have an in-house finance team?
Yes, and this is a common engagement model — PNPC works alongside an in-house finance or accounts team rather than replacing it, typically providing the structural framework (forecast model design, treasury policy, banking structure review) and periodic senior CA oversight, while the in-house team executes the day-to-day rolling update and data entry. This gives the business the discipline and external perspective of a CA firm's structured approach without requiring the company to build that expertise from scratch internally.
What is sweep-in/sweep-out banking, and is it worth setting up?
A sweep-in/sweep-out (or auto-sweep) facility automatically transfers surplus balance above a defined threshold in your current account into a linked fixed deposit at the end of each day, and automatically sweeps it back if the current account balance falls below the threshold — giving you FD-level returns on surplus while retaining same-day liquidity if you need the funds. It is generally worth setting up for any business that regularly carries surplus above its operating buffer in a current account, since it requires no ongoing manual intervention once configured and costs nothing beyond the bank's standard terms.
How does PNPC handle treasury advisory for a business with high customer concentration risk?
When a small number of customers represent a large share of receivables, the cash flow forecast is built with specific attention to that customer's payment pattern and any early signs of drift from their historical norm, and the minimum cash buffer recommendation is typically set higher than it would be for a business with diversified receivables, precisely because a single delayed or defaulted payment from a concentrated customer has an outsized impact on liquidity. We also flag customer concentration as a standing risk factor for management attention, separate from the routine forecast.
Is there a difference between liquidity management and working capital management?
They overlap substantially but are not identical. Working capital management focuses on the components of the balance sheet — inventory, receivables, payables — and how efficiently they are managed to free up or absorb cash. Liquidity management is the broader discipline of ensuring the business has adequate cash or near-cash resources (including facility headroom, not just cash-on-hand) to meet obligations as they fall due — which includes working capital efficiency but also covers financing structure, surplus deployment, and buffer planning. In practice, our treasury advisory engagement addresses both together, since they are deeply interdependent.
What role does PNPC play if our business needs emergency short-term financing?
If the rolling forecast flags an approaching gap that cannot be closed through collection acceleration or spend deferral alone, we help identify and structure the appropriate short-term financing response — drawing on an existing but underutilised facility, arranging a bridge facility, or, if the gap is more structural, initiating a proper working capital facility enhancement or new facility application through our debt syndication advisory service. Because the forecast already exists and is credible, this conversation with a lender happens from a position of preparedness rather than crisis.
Does treasury advisory cover investment of surplus cash into anything beyond fixed deposits and liquid funds?
For most operating businesses, PNPC's recommendations are deliberately conservative and liquidity-focused — fixed deposits, liquid or overnight mutual funds, and sweep arrangements — because the surplus being deployed is operating cash that may be needed on short notice, not long-term investment capital. We do not position treasury advisory as a wealth management or capital markets investment service; where a client has genuinely long-term surplus beyond any foreseeable operating need, that is a separate conversation, typically referred to appropriate wealth or investment advisory expertise rather than handled within the treasury function.
How often should the treasury policy itself be reviewed and updated?
We recommend a quarterly review as a baseline, with an immediate ad hoc review triggered by any material change — a new banking relationship, a significant shift in customer concentration or payment terms, entry into export/import activity creating new FX exposure, or a new group entity added to the structure. A policy that accurately reflected the business a year ago but was never revisited typically no longer reflects how the business actually operates, and management tends to stop referring to it — which defeats its purpose.
Why should we engage PNPC for treasury advisory rather than build this in-house or use a generic template?
A generic cash flow template, downloaded online, does not know your actual GST due dates, your specific customers' real payment behaviour, your existing loan repayment schedule, or your payroll calendar — it produces a forecast that looks structured but is built on generic assumptions. Building it fully in-house requires dedicated finance expertise and time that many growing businesses do not yet have spare capacity for. PNPC combines the CA-level financial discipline to build a forecast that reflects your actual obligations — because we often already handle your GST, TDS, and compliance calendar — with the ongoing rigor of weekly rolling updates and quarterly policy review that keeps the tool genuinely useful rather than a one-time exercise that goes stale.
What does the PNPC treasury and liquidity advisory package actually include?
Initial cash flow diagnostic and working capital cycle assessment. 13-week rolling cash flow model, updated on an agreed cadence. 12-month or multi-year liquidity projection. Written treasury policy covering buffer levels, approval thresholds, and deployment rules. Banking structure review. Surplus deployment structuring where applicable. Foreign exchange exposure assessment and hedging policy recommendation for exporters/importers. Intercompany cash structuring for group and India-UAE clients. Recurring cash position review meetings. Quarterly policy update. Direct CA contact for treasury-related questions between review meetings.
How does PNPC coordinate treasury advisory with our existing accounting and compliance work?
For clients already on a PNPC accounting, GST, TDS, or audit retainer, treasury advisory draws directly on the same books, bank reconciliations, and compliance calendar we already maintain — meaning the cash flow forecast is more accurate from the outset and requires less duplicate data-gathering than if a separate advisor built it from scratch. For clients engaging PNPC for treasury advisory alone, we can operate alongside your existing accountant, though a forecast is generally most reliable when the same firm has visibility into both the historical books and the compliance calendar driving future cash outflows.
| Feature | Generic Spreadsheet Template | Bank's Own Cash Flow Tool | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|---|
| Built on your actual obligations | No — generic assumptions and categories | Partial — built to justify a specific loan application, not ongoing management | Yes — GST, TDS, payroll, and loan schedules from your actual records |
| Update discipline | Whatever the user remembers to do | One-time, at loan application | Weekly/fortnightly rolling update built into the retainer |
| Working capital cycle diagnostic | Not included | Not included | Cash conversion cycle mapped and inefficiencies flagged upfront |
| Treasury policy | Not included | Not included | Written policy — buffer, approval thresholds, deployment, FX hedging |
| Surplus deployment advice | Not included | Not included | FD/liquid fund/sweep structuring against defined buffer |
| FX hedging guidance | Not included | Sometimes offered by the bank, aligned to selling its own FX products | Independent CA assessment of genuine exposure, RBI-framework compliant |
| Group / India-UAE consolidation | Not included | Not included | Consolidated cash view and intercompany structuring across entities |
| Fundraising readiness | Requires rebuild when needed | Bank-specific format, not portable | Same maintained model repurposes directly into CMA data / investor materials |
| Ongoing relationship | None — a static file | Ends once the loan is sanctioned | Continuous — quarterly policy review, early-warning monitoring, CA on call |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Cash flow diagnostic and working capital cycle assessment — identifying where cash is currently trapped or under-deployed
- 02
13-week rolling cash flow model, rebuilt and rolled forward on an agreed cadence
- 03
12-month or multi-year liquidity projection layered on top of the short-term model
- 04
Written treasury policy — minimum buffer, approval thresholds, surplus deployment rules, FX hedging thresholds
- 05
Banking structure review — single bank, multiple banking, or consortium assessment against actual facility needs
- 06
Surplus cash deployment structuring — FDs, liquid funds, and sweep-in/sweep-out arrangements
- 07
Foreign exchange exposure quantification and hedging policy for exporters, importers, and foreign-currency borrowers
- 08
Intercompany and India-UAE group cash structuring, correctly documented for related-party and FEMA compliance
- 09
Recurring cash position review meetings with early-warning threshold monitoring
- 10
Quarterly treasury policy and forecast model review and update
- 11
Direct coordination with debt syndication or equity fund raising advisory when a financing event arises
- 12
Direct CA access for treasury-related questions between scheduled reviews
Talk to a PNPC Chartered Accountant before your next cash crunch finds you first. Not a generic spreadsheet, not a one-time bank exercise — a rolling forecast, a written policy, and a CA who reviews your cash position with you on a recurring cadence, so a shortfall is a planning conversation weeks in advance, not an emergency the week it happens.