What is Additional Funds Needed (AFN)?
AFN is the amount of external financing a company must raise to support a projected increase in sales when asset growth outpaces the increase in spontaneous liabilities and retained earnings.
What is the formula for calculating AFN?
AFN = (A/S0) x change in sales - (L/S0) x change in sales - (profit margin x projected sales x retention ratio), where A/S0 and L/S0 are the asset and spontaneous liability ratios to current sales.
Can the AFN result be negative?
Yes. A negative AFN means the company generates more internal funds than it needs for growth, leaving a surplus that can be used to pay down debt, buy back stock, or increase dividends.
What counts as a spontaneous liability in the AFN calculation?
Spontaneous liabilities are obligations that rise automatically with sales, such as accounts payable and accrued expenses, and they reduce the amount of external funding needed.
How can a company reduce its Additional Funds Needed?
A company can lower AFN by improving asset turnover, cutting inventory, speeding up collections, raising profit margins, or retaining more earnings by paying lower dividends.