1. Introduction
The COVID-19 crisis in 2020 and 2021 massively distorted supply chains and resulted in one of the sharpest stock markets fall in history and a surprisingly fast recovery. This was followed in 2022 by the war in Ukraine and prolonged supply chain bottlenecks with skyrocketing energy prices and soaring inflation. Initially, the COVID-19 crisis appeared to be both supply and demand shocks, but the observed demand effects were mainly due to restrictions—not due to the willingness or ability to consume (
Guerrieri et al. 2022). The central banks acted decisively and provided the market with ample liquidity, possibly contributing to the historically high asset price valuations (
Borio 2020;
Cantú et al. 2021;
Echarte Fernández et al. 2021). However, in the second half of 2022, the world is entering unknown territory where central banks have limited room for liquidity boost, although the demand might start to decline (not least due to the increased interest rates). This means that collaborative working capital management might become an increasingly important source of financing. It follows that the supply chain should be seen as a means ‘to fund’ the company. At the same time, due to the multiple interdependencies with suppliers, service providers and customers, the organization must also serve as a source for financing the supply chain (
Rogers et al. 2020;
Hofmann et al. 2021).
What is ahead might have some similarities (liquidity and demand shocks) with the economic downturn of 2009 (triggered primarily by the Lehman Brothers collapse in 2008), characterized by suddenly declining sales, putting a squeeze on revenues, profit margins and working capital requirements (
Enqvist et al. 2014). During this crisis, the liquidity of many companies was under pressure and cash became a scarce resource due to the tight credit market conditions (
Brunnermeier 2009).
Chen et al. (
2013) have documented that the internal liquidity risk along the supply chain affects a firm’s credit risk, especially during the period of economic downturns. In addition, the internal liquidity risk covers the risk of working capital changes and the phenomenon of the “financial bullwhip effect” (
Chen et al. 2013).
Supply chain management is seen as a possible competitive advantage (
Green et al. 2006;
Barney 2012;
Helmuth et al. 2015). This topic is also valuable among practitioners and is underpinned by the increasing appointment of chief supply chain officers to top management teams (
Roh et al. 2016). Overall, it is seen as a management philosophy highlighting interorganizational network aspects beyond the firm’s boundaries (
Mena et al. 2013). In contrast, reducing working capital is still suggested mainly with narrow single firm lenses resembling the classical self-orientation without considering the adverse effect on the adjacent supply chain members (
Hofmann and Kotzab 2010). As a result, companies might optimize their financials without considering their affiliated suppliers and customers. Firms may have an optimal level of working capital that maximizes their single firm value (
Bradley et al. 1984). However, adequate levels may differ to reflect changes in business conditions. Corporate executives can either strive to increase the firm’s profitability, sometimes at the expense of supply chain partners, or seek to add value to their supply chain in the first place (
Rogers et al. 2020). One argument is to minimize trade credit to reduce working capital, which correlates negatively with profitability (e.g.,
Deloof 2003;
Lazaridis and Tryfonidis 2006;
Charitou et al. 2010).
It is debatable whether firms should instead think more in terms of supply chains or if isolated and single-firm considerations are more beneficial to the shareholder value (
Lanier et al. 2010;
Wetzel and Hofmann 2019). The behavior of economically weak firms in terms of trade credit and inventory strategies in the supply chain might differ compared to financially strong firms. These differences are likely more distinct during economic downturns. Overall, financial constraints are widely acknowledged when discussing investment policies (
Clementi and Hopenhayn 2006) but less so in studies of the relationship between working capital and firm performance (
Baños-Caballero et al. 2014;
Bode et al. 2014). Furthermore, it has been emphasized that to withstand liquidity constraints, managers adopt efficient working capital management policies during non-crisis periods to be prepared for a sudden economic downturn (
Oseifuah 2018).
RQ1: How do firms generally behave in economic downturns regarding their working capital components?
RQ2: Do firms with higher financial constraints behave differently in economic downturns regarding their working capital components than firms without financial constraints?
Our study aims to investigate these research questions through empirical work. Instead of determining specific hypotheses in the first place, it is much appreciated to understand the working capital behavior of firms during an adverse cash flow shock more thoroughly. Thus, we rely primarily on secondary data to address the research questions from a financial perspective, including working capital measures. We choose a historical perspective from the financial crisis era as we have a complete dataset around the crisis, and this crisis illustrates a demand and liquidity shock. The analyzed dataset consists of 2111 stock-listed firms and 10,555 observations spreading over the period of five years. The analyses were conducted with descriptive statistics and generalized linear mixed-effects modeling.
Second, following the works of
Enqvist et al. (
2014) and
Ramiah et al. (
2014), we provide empirical evidence for working capital and its ability to buffer the negative effects during an adverse cash flow shock.
Third, we expand the theoretical lens of embeddedness in the supply chain (
Kim and Henderson 2015) to the field of working capital management by showing that firms do not inevitably push their credit risk and capital cost towards upstream suppliers in times of an economic crisis.
Fourth, we found surprisingly strong support for supply chain-oriented behavior in working capital management, especially among better-performing firms. This observation has substantial implications for future research, as it is of particular interest to further study whether the supply chain-oriented mindset is truly spreading among the firms or whether the observed behavior results from some unknown dynamics.
Fifth, our findings should motivate practitioners to implement specific trade credit practices taking the different degrees of financial stability of their customers as well as suppliers into account. Instead of minimizing working capital from a single firm-based view, an adequate level of working capital inducing the financial health of the affiliated supply chain partners might also provide performance benefits to the focal firm.
Overall, our findings suggest that longer days sales outstanding and shorter days inventory held are related to better financial performance while days payable outstanding had no observable effect. Furthermore, financially constrained firms have shorter days sales outstanding than average firms. In economic downturns, firms seem to reduce both working capital and fixed investments to asset ratios. The financially constrained firms pushed down their fixed investments ratio more aggressively than average firms while, in contrast, the financially strongest firms pushed down working capital to asset ratio in comparison to average firms. Interestingly, neither the cash conversion cycle, days payable outstanding nor company performance or fixed investments to asset ratios fully returned to the pre-shock level. Perhaps surprisingly, the behavior of non-financially constrained firms, which also perform better, indicate stronger supply chain orientation than that of average firms during the economic downturn.
The article proceeds as follows:
Section 2 delivers the theoretical background to the approach of this article.
Section 3 develops the research propositions.
Section 4 explains the methods applied. It encompasses the data sources, research variables as well as the statistical models and estimation.
Section 5 includes the descriptive statistics and the estimation results.
Section 6 discusses the findings and the limitations.
Section 7 concludes the article.
2. Theoretical Backgrounds
One of the earliest sources of supply chain financing is
Meltzer (
1960), indicating that during periods of restricted money supply, liquid firms provide trade credit to increase the sales to the less liquid business partners.
Schwartz (
1974) suggested an economic model with a rationale for the use of trade credit, acknowledged the differences in firms’ access to external funds and noted that trade credit is offered more extensively in times of increased monetary constraints.
Despite the early observations, the impact of economic downturns on working capital management has received limited attention in research. Traditional working capital management practices are not necessarily sufficient during downturns (
Simon et al. 2021). Furthermore, not many studies have investigated working capital management practices during a financial crisis regardless of the importance of working capital management in addressing liquidity shocks (
Ramiah et al. 2014;
Gonçalves et al. 2018).
As the focus of our study encompasses the working capital behavior in economic downturns, we refer to the credit crunch experienced resulting from the financial crisis to as a shock period. It is likely that the cost disadvantage of external finance compared to internal finance is relatively small before and after the shock period (
Fazzari et al. 1988). This disadvantage is likely to rise heterogeneously during the shock period, causing more variability in investment policies. This is related to the differentiation between financially constrained and non-financially constrained firms and their access and availability of external finance, typically consisting of loans from financial intermediaries and debt issued on the capital market. According to
Bernanke et al. (
1996), the premium on external finance relates inversely to the firm’s net worth.
Shin and Soenen (
1998) provide an early analysis of the relationship between the net trade cycle and firm profitability, suggesting a strong negative relationship between a firm’s net trade cycle and profitability. Furthermore, stock returns indicate a negative correlation with the level of working capital. Thus, reducing working capital appears to increase shareholder value (
Brandenburg 2016). Later, this is further complicated by the suggestion that the cash conversion cycle has a negative relationship with the firm’s profitability and value, but the effect reduces or reverses at the lower level of the cash conversion cycle (
Chong-Chuo 2018). In addition, the cash conversion cycle is observed to have a negative impact and governance quality (
Vu Thi and Phung 2021).
In this context, the presented financial figures play a role in measuring the firm’s performance from an interorganizational perspective. According to
Farris and Hutchinson (
2002), the indicators are composite metrics to assess operational excellence through cash flow management as well as the capabilities to manage the capital more efficiently as part of a supply chain. Derived from published financial reports and under consideration of the specific industry, the working capital measures (i.e., the cash conversion cycle or cash-to-cash cycle) also illustrate the dynamics of a business by combining inbound material activities with suppliers, through manufacturing operations, and outbound sales activities (
Lind et al. 2012).
Fazzari et al. (
1988) argue that in order to allow steady investments, when the cost disadvantage of external finance over internal funds increases, a high dividend-paying firm can retain its income to substitute external funds. On the other hand, firms that retained a larger portion of their income have limited alternative sources of financing resulting in an investment policy that is sensitive to changes in the cost of external capital.
Although there are explicit accounting distinctions, working capital and fixed assets are considered to be part of operating capital. As aforementioned, the main distinction lies within the liquidity of the two components. Defined as the difference between a firm’s current assets and current liabilities, it can be shown that working capital competes with fixed assets for a limited pool of finance (
Fazzari and Petersen 1993). Contrary to current assets, fixed assets are not meant to be liquidated within one year (
Ding et al. 2013). Accordingly, it is costly for firms to change the level of these investments in the short term. Especially for financially constrained firms, it would be much more appreciated to bounce back from cash flow shocks on fixed investments first by adjusting working capital (
Fazzari and Petersen 1993).
Despite the well-known benefits of SCM in operations, only a few firms recognize the potential of interorganizational networks for their financial practices through collaboration (
Simatupang and Sridharan 2005). It seems to be necessary to develop an improved understanding of financial performance management in networks from a more holistic supply chain perspective (
Busi and Bititci 2006). Following
D’Avanzo et al. (
2003), successful supply chain management correlates highly with the financial performance of the firm. Subsequently, supply chain leaders show significantly above-average financial performance (
Greer and Theuri 2012). Referring to an interorganizational scale, it must also be stated that single supply chain members often act against the supply chain surplus when achieving the same goal of improvement (
Hofmann and Kotzab 2010). Financial factors, such as credit risk and capital costs are often transferred toward the upstream supply chain (
Rafuse 1996). Although extended payment terms constitute a lower risk to the buyer, they can destabilize the entire supply chain as a result of a higher-risk supplier base and their restricted access to short-term financing (
Seifert et al. 2013). Referring to
Huff and Rogers (
2015), research has been extended on supply chain finance strategies and their effects on firm performance, analyzing working capital metrics over time.
Research on working capital management has focused mainly on measures and dynamics from a single firm perspective, whereas investigations within the supply chain context have shown deficits in financial aspects and managerial accounting support (
Viskari and Kärri 2012). Only a few analyses are based primarily on “partnership financing” (
Akhtar 1997), “cooperative finance” (
Van Sickle and Ladd 1983) or “supply chain finance-oriented working capital management” (
Wetzel and Hofmann 2019). While it is assumed that most firms operate with a certain level of working capital, the single firm tries to have less capital tied-up in non-productive stocks, shortens the time for accounts receivables and extends cash payments for accounts payable as far as possible (
Farris and Hutchinson 2002). On this basis,
Hofmann and Kotzab (
2010) further examined a supply chain-oriented approach to working capital management through the cash conversion cycle. In distinction to the traditional cash conversion cycle objectives, an adequate collaborative cycle is one that minimizes the cost of tied-up capital while maximizing the gains of cash received across the participating supply chain members. From an interorganizational perspective, firms with lower refinancing rates and greater financial strength should carry more working capital compared to firms with higher financing costs.
Grosse-Ruyken et al. (
2011) present a similar argument, suggesting to consider up- and downstream partners and that an adequate level of working capital depends, among others, on the business model, specific design configurations and risk aspects within the supply chain.
5. Analysis and Results
5.1. Descriptive Results
Descriptive statistics on the research variables reveal interesting differences.
Table 2 shows the medians of sales, accounts receivable, accounts payable and inventory. Based on median sales, Japanese firms are the largest and European firms are the smallest. The smallest median sales year is either 2010 (Japan) or 2009 (EU and USA). Perhaps surprisingly, US firms have the largest median inventory and the smallest amount of accounts payable every year.
Table 3 lists the Tobin’s
Q,
DSO,
DIH and
DPO in Japan, EU and USA between 2007 and 2011. The Tobin’s Q in the US is the highest during the entire observation period, with the EU following next and Japan having the lowest
Q. For example, the Tobin’s
Q is 1.20 in the USA in 2007, whereas the corresponding figures of EU and Japan are 0.87 and 0.57. Another observation about the Tobin’s
Q is that different regions have the low point of the Q in different years. While US and EU firms have the lowest
Q in 2008, the low point in Japan is a year later, in 2009. In addition, the Tobin’s
Q of the US firms recovers rather quickly, even though it does not reach the pre-shock levels during the observation period. At the same time, the Tobin’s
Q of the EU firms remains at a low level after the crisis in 2009.
As with the Tobin’s Q, there are also differences between the regions in the payment times, the DSO and DPO and the DIH between the regions. It seems that both the DSO and DPO of the Japanese firms are systematically higher (102 and 60 days in 2007) than those of the European and US firms. Similarly, the DSO and DPO of the US firms are the lowest during the entire observation periods.
The differences in days of inventory held are smaller. The DIH of Japanese firms varies between 45 days in 2011 and 48 days in 2009, whereas the corresponding numbers for EU and USA are 53 and 58 days for EU firms and 45 and 46 days for the US firms.
Table 4 summarizes the differences between the financially constrained (
HighFIS) and non-financially constrained firms (
LowFIS) as well as the reference group (
BaseFIS). The Tobin’s
Q of firms with low or high financial constraint as well as of the reference group declines rapidly in 2008, where after it recovers in 2009 and 2010, only to decline again in 2011. Both the days of sales and days of payable outstanding decline in 2008 and recover slightly in 2009, without reaching the pre-shock levels after that. The days inventory held, on the other hand, remains stable during the entire observation period. With all the mentioned variables, it seems that both the low and high
FIS firms have shorter
DSO and
DPO and less
DIH than the reference group.
5.2. Model-Based Results
The model-based results from fixed effects are presented in
Table 5. The sector and region were included in the model as random effects and are not elaborated as their effects cannot be generalized. The existence of random effects, logarithmic link function, interaction terms and the transformations cause the values of coefficients to be relatively difficult to interpret. Significant coefficients were only included into the final models except when the interaction term was significant but some of the main effects were not. In these cases, the main effect(s) were also included. The main effects should not be interpreted when there is an interaction term in the model. As the signs and significance of the main effects remain the same when interactions are removed, no separate table is included for the interpretation of main effects.
It seems that the cash conversion cycle increased slightly over time and that it increased more notably during the shock. Within the sample, the financially constrained firms (HighFIS) seem to have shorter cash to cash conversion cycles than the average firms. Strong cash flow from financing to the total assets at the beginning of the period seems to result in longer CCC and the Tobin’s Q seem to have no effect.
The shock also seems to affect all of the components of the cash conversion cycle. This reveals interesting dynamics about how firms absorb the effects of a shock. The shock pushes up the inventories but at the same time DSO decreases. Furthermore, DPO decreases, meaning that firms pay their suppliers faster. However, this could also be partly because firms might temporarily buy less. Overall, DPO seems to have a slight decreasing trend. Perhaps more surprisingly, firms with different financial constraints react similarly to the shock in terms of DPO and DIH, but the least financially constrained firms—the financially strongest—tend to reduce DPO less than average firms, perhaps allowing time for their supply chain partners to adjust to the shock. It should also be noted that in total the most financially constrained firms have shorter DSO than average firms.
All these findings combined, it seems that the shock causes the inventory levels (DIH) to increase and accounts payable (DPO) to decrease, which causes the firms to react by adjusting DSO. As the total CCC increases, the results imply that the effects of increasing inventory cannot be fully offset by the changes in payment times. Considering the financial constraint, it seems that the effect is especially on the DSO, where the firms seem to be different.
The ratios related to capital behave differently in the analysis. Overall, the ratio of working capital to the total assets at the beginning of the period remains about the same level over time, while the trend for the ratio of investments to the total assets at the beginning of the period declines slightly. The shock is pushing both ratios down. The effects of financial constraint are also different. WCtoA is smaller for the most financially constrained firms but the financially strongest firms reduce WCtoA more than average firms during the shock. On the other hand, the most constrained firms seem to reduce ItoA more due to the shock than average firms.
Tobin’s Q, indicating the financial performance of firms, decreases slightly overtime and the shock has quite a strong negative effect on it. Unsurprisingly, the non-financially constrained firms perform better than average firms.
Table 6 show the results based on model 10 that further elaborates the interplay between the working capital component and the financial performance. These findings further support the earlier findings: there is a slightly negative trend, the shock had a negative effect, financially strong firms perform better, longer
DSO and smaller
DIH result in better performance and
DPO has no effect.
7. Conclusions
7.1. Findings and Theoretical Contributions
This article gives insights into working capital management considering the financial constraints and the different phases of a business cycle. As expected, our analysis shows that financially strong firms perform better than average firms; longer DSO (as a concession to customers) and smaller DIH (as a resilience sign of melting stocks) result in better overall financial performance. Surprisingly, DPO was not observed to affect financial performance. Furthermore, our study suggests that financially constrained firms have shorter DSO than average firms, which is interpreted as a sign of the struggle for survival.
In economic downturns, firms seem to reduce both working capital and fixed investments to asset ratios. However, the financially constrained firms pushed down their fixed investments ratio more aggressively than average firms, while the most financially robust firms pushed down the working capital to asset ratio. Although these investment ratios went down, this was not the case for the cash conversion cycle as could be expected. This contradictory finding might be due to a computational effect. As is generally known, the components of the CCC are calculated using a simple count-back method based on annual figures. During an economic downturn, firms sold and purchased less. Firms also probably tried to adjust their payment terms, but these changes could not fully mitigate the effects of the cash conversion cycle. Furthermore, neither the cash conversion cycle, DPO, company performance nor fixed investments to asset ratios fully returned to the pre-shock level.
High stocks of working capital buffer the negative cash flow effect on fixed investments, but firms with relatively limited cash reserves reduce fixed investment. It is further debatable if the use of working capital buffer should be favored if a firm does not face financial constraints. On one hand, an isolated self-oriented firm view suggests reducing working capital (
Shin and Soenen 1998), even if this is at the expense of the associated partners in the supply chain. Alternatively, the supply chain-oriented view suggests value in inter-firm financing depending on the firm’s individual cost of capital. The latter was already supported by
Meltzer (
1960) and is stressed by, e.g., (
Hofmann and Kotzab 2010;
Wuttke et al. 2013;
More and Basu 2013;
Blackman et al. 2013;
Hofmann and Zumsteg 2015;
Huff and Rogers 2015;
Peng and Zhou 2019; and
Hofmann et al. 2021). Our findings indicate behavior well in line with supply chain orientation—this is especially true among financially strong firms. Overall, research focusing on supply chain-oriented working capital management is gaining increasing attention (
Wetzel and Hofmann 2019).
7.2. Practical and Policy Contributions
As for managerial implications, the results highlight the considerations when managing working capital in terms of financial constraints with implications to supply chain partners. Working capital management depends, among other things, on the relative degree of availability of external funds, one’s supply chain and the cost of capital. At least, if easy access to the debt and commercial paper market exists, it might pay to provide trade credit, faster payments and stock buffer transfers to the more financially constrained suppliers and customers. The liquidity required for this could be provided via supply chain financing instruments (
Rogers et al. 2020), such as the instruction of dynamic discounting (with own cash) or the solutions of reverse factoring or sale of receivables (via money from financial service providers or institutional investors). Contrarily, financially constrained firms might urge their supply chain partners not to utilize their bargaining power to dictate payment and delivery terms (
Hofmann et al. 2021). As information asymmetry is typically reduced when dealing within the supply chain when compared to external financial intermediaries, this can be leveraged by sharing, among supply chain members, the avoided risk premium charged by external parties. Our findings are helpful for decision-makers in revising the optimal level of cash according to an economic downturn-related fluctuation in net working capital. When determining the adequate level of net working capital, the classic levers of the cash conversion cycle (
DSO,
DIH,
DPO), the financial restraints and the possibility of liquidating fixed assets must be considered. In addition, the affiliated supply chain partners’ financial situations must also be considered. Additionally, policymakers can use these results to recognize that trade credit support is needed in economic downturns. The government’s numerous direct and indirect support measures in the early phase of the COVID-19 crisis are evidence of this (
Anderson et al. 2021;
Khan 2022).
7.3. Limitations and Future Research
As with any investigation, this study must deal with limitations. Tobin’s Q was calculated using market capitalization, necessitating that all analyzed firms were stock listed, resulting in the sample being relatively large and well established. The levels of financial constraints might be even more distinct if private firms were included. When defining the key metrics of working capital (especially DPO and DIH), sales were used as a proxy for the cost of sales (i.e., the margin was included). As the margin is also likely to change during an economic downturn, the measure itself might absorb some of the changes, i.e., the true effects might be more substantial than observed. Furthermore, although we found surprisingly strong support for the supply chain-oriented view, our findings are relatively descriptive and do not allow the proper attitude of the firms to be revealed—they merely suggest that firms behave in many senses similar to the supply chain orientation and the financially most robust firms even more than average firms. Another limitation is that we have not included the recent crisis years 2020 to 2022 in our analysis. Finally, we have not included in our analysis (a) the specific “power situation” in the supply chain (i.e., whether the company in question can enforce trade credit terms adjustments) and (b) whether the companies already use supply chain financing instruments (such as dynamic discounting, reverse factoring or the sale of receivables).
As this research found evidence that the supply chain orientation might be gaining popularity, it would make sense to study further whether the supply chain-oriented mindset concerning financing aspects (“to fund”) is genuinely spreading among the firms or whether other possibly selfish dynamics cause the observed behavior. Such a study could perhaps be carried out through a large-scale survey combined with financial data once the current crisis turbulences have passed. Furthermore, it would make sense to extend the research to non-listed firms where the effects of financial constraints on working capital management might be even more prominent. Finally, it would also be desirable to conduct a study to determine whether companies with a robust supply chain orientation are more able to weather economic downturns than companies that (have to) focus primarily on themselves. A moderating factor that should not be underestimated in further investigations could be the existence of supply chain financing practices.