Cash Flow Forecast

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Cash Flow Forecast

Cash Flow Forecast is a financial projection that estimates how much money will come in and go out of your business in the future — usually weekly, monthly, or quarterly.
In Filipino MSME terms: ito yung “pagtatantiya ng galaw ng pera” para malaman mo kung kailan ka magkukulang o magkakaroon ng sobra.

It helps you prepare for slow months, plan expenses, and avoid cash shortages.


Why Cash Flow Forecast Matters

For Filipino MSMEs, forecasting cash flow helps you:

  • Predict shortages — alam mo kung kailan ka mauubusan ng pera
  • Plan expenses — like inventory, rent, or equipment
  • Prepare for slow seasons — rainy days, holidays, off-peak months
  • Decide when to restock or scale operations
  • Improve financial stability — fewer surprises, fewer utang

Many MSMEs operate “day-to-day,” but forecasting gives you control and confidence.


What a Cash Flow Forecast Includes

  • Projected sales — based on past performance or trends
  • Expected expenses — rent, utilities, inventory, salaries
  • Upcoming payments — supplier dues, loan repayments
  • Seasonal patterns — peak and slow months
  • Net cash position — kung may sobra o kulang

Example / Context

Example 1 (Carinderia):
You forecast that sales drop during long weekends. You adjust by buying fewer ingredients to avoid spoilage.

Example 2 (Online Seller):
You expect higher sales during 11.11 and 12.12, so you forecast cash needs for inventory and shipping fees.

Example 3 (Freelancer):
You know clients pay every 30 days, so you forecast when cash will arrive and plan bills accordingly.

Example 4 (Retail Store):
You forecast that January is slow, so you save extra cash from December sales.


Related Terms


FAQs

1. How often should I create a cash flow forecast?

Monthly is ideal, but weekly forecasting is best for food and retail businesses.

2. What tools can I use?

Excel, Google Sheets, POS reports, or simple notebooks for microbusinesses.

3. Is a cash flow forecast accurate?

It’s an estimate — accuracy improves as you track real numbers consistently.

4. What if my forecast shows a shortage?

Adjust expenses, increase margins, delay purchases, or boost sales through promos.


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