Retained Cash Flow - RCP

  

Categories: Accounting

You had profits. Your company generated cash or had positive cash flow. And you kept it. Like water in your thighs after a salty meal. See: Retained Earnings.

When companies retain their cash flow, that's a good thing, usually. It means that they don't need to spend for competitive reasons, for upgrading their tractor smelters or building new whatevers. They just let the cash build up in the bank.

The ultimate retained cash flow story? Apple: $150 billion in cash, essentially no debt, and building. iPhone sales must've been an incredibly salty meal.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is free cash flow?13 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop what is free cash flow Well it's

00:06

the cash a company produces and pretty much after everything

00:10

like whatever dot com has one hundred million bucks in

00:12

pre tax profits A tax bill of thirty milton at

00:15

them seventy million dollars in earnings But they also had

00:18

depreciation on their whatever stamping factory of ten million dollars

00:22

So in fact they generated eighty million dollars in cash

00:25

while having seventy million in earnings And no there were

00:28

no tricky things done in the year to draw down

00:30

inventory volumes to produce a lot more cash or any

00:33

other chick a nunnery here The company also has committed

00:35

to paying a dividend of five milic order or twenty

00:38

mil a year That dividend payment gets included in the

00:41

free cash flow calculation as well So after eighty million

00:44

in cash production from operations the dividend the company pays

00:48

out to shareholders then is taken out of that eighty

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So the free cash number Yep sixty million bucks And

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why does this number even matter Well if you go

00:56

old school on investing and think about what a share

00:59

of a given company buys you in the form of

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earnings and cash or dead on the balance sheet this

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year Next year in the next you can think of

01:07

whatever dot com in terms of having a free cash

01:10

flow yield That is if the company was valued at

01:13

a billion dollars and it had one hundred million dollars

01:15

of cash and one hundred million dollars of dead zero

01:18

net cash or debt And yes this is oh so

01:21

theoretical Well then the company would have a six percent

01:24

free cash flow yield right because it's generating sixty million

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after everything over a bill so that sixty mill is

01:30

the free cash flow But investors get the free cash

01:33

flow in some form most likely justin accumulation of cash

01:36

on the balance sheet and then they also get another

01:39

twenty mill in dividends So add to that twenty million

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dividends and assuming you get no growth or decline while

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investors or buying in it a billion dollar valuation while

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they be getting a total of eight percent of their

01:50

cash back in one form or another each year either

01:53

in just cash produced by the company free castle and

01:55

or that dividend or set another way the sixty million

01:58

free cash flow would presumably then just accumulate on the

02:01

balance sheet Adding value to the company is cash piled

02:03

up or would be used wisely in one form or

02:06

another presumably like to buy back stock or by competitors

02:09

or whatever other whatever's The key idea here is that

02:12

free cash flow is truly free It's not encumbered It

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is an ode for dividends or other big sinking fund

02:19

obligations This year or other things it's free and available

02:23

for the company to do You know whatever they want 00:02:26.105 --> [endTime] with

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