The Clear Path to Cash
Everybody has a simple explanation for Toys R Us. Amazon showed up. Online shopping got easier. Parents stopped walking through giant toy aisles. Come on. Kids didn’t stop wanting toys. Parents didn’t stop buying birthday presents. The brand still meant something, and the stores still had a place in people’s memory. In this episode, Cash Flow Mike [www.cashflowmike.com] looks at Toys R Us through the Clear Path To Cash app to see what the numbers were saying before everybody had an opinion. The app gave Toys R Us a D. Not because the company had no revenue. In the final year Mike reviewed, Toys R Us still had about $11.5 billion in revenue. The problem was that the activity was not creating enough financial breathing room. Mike breaks down the warning signs: Current ratio showed the cushion was thin. Quick ratio showed easy cash was even thinner. Days cash on hand showed the clock was running. Interest coverage showed debt was part of the conversation. The cash conversion cycle showed too much money was trapped inside the business. Toys R Us did not run out of toys. It did not run out of customers. It ran out of financial room. That is what Clear Path To Cash helps surface: The pressure underneath the headline. Drop a company in the comments that you want Mike to analyze next. Famous failure. Surprising comeback. Struggling business model. That moment… we know it. Clear Path To Cash [www.clearpathtocash.com] was built for that moment.
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