Tuesday 19 May 2015

Five ways to measure business health

Keep on top of how well your business is performing by monitoring five key indicators.

There’s an old adage in accountancy: turnover is vanity, profit is sanity and cash-flow is reality. It’s a way of saying that there are numerous measures you can apply when measuring the financial health of your business, but it’s often good to have a rounded picture.

Too often, in a lot of smaller businesses, owners see the annual accounts process as a necessity to satisfy HMRC and possibly their bank. For that reason, it can be left to the last minute. In effect, this can often be nine months after the end of a particular accounting period. So by the time they get an insight into how well their company is doing, the information is no longer up to date.

My advice is to talk to your accountant about receiving management accounts on a monthly or quarterly basis. Then, you need to start looking at the following key indicators:

CASH-FLOW

Everyone talks about it, but how many people really understand its importance? The balance of the money flowing in and out of the business needs to be positive and you can only achieve this with accurate, up-to-date forecasting. You can then start to analyse the reasons for any discrepancies between the projections and your real figures. 

TURNOVER 

Again, here you should be interested in any differences between your projected turnover and the actual figures. If there are variances, it’s worth having a discussion with your accountant and talking through the implications.

GROSS PROFIT

In a nutshell, your gross profit margin is your income, less cost of goods sold. If this figure isn’t high enough, you won’t be able to cover your overheads and make yourself a profit.

OPERATING PROFIT 

Your operating profit figure is your gross profit less your overheads, but will exclude tax and interest. If this figure is too low and you haven’t yet taken money out of the business, you may have nothing to show for your endeavours.

NET PROFIT

This is your total income, less all expenses including interest and tax.


With cloud accounting now becoming increasingly common, it’s actually possible to monitor all these critical indicators in real time. This means you can make comparisons to the same period last year and see whether any improvements you’ve made to your business practices have achieved results. Contact us now to find out of a switch to the cloud would benefit your business.

Friday 8 May 2015

Forget the Lamborghini. Park yourself in front of an IFA

New pension rules aren’t just about people acquiring fancy sports cars, they also have big implications for financial planning. 

Much of the coverage in the press about the new pension reforms has been a little bit caricatured. There has been a lot of focus on the ability of savers to cash in and buy a Lamborghini, which probably won’t be top on the list for most people approaching retirement. Considerably less has been said, however, about how the new rules affect financial planning.

In the past, when advising clients on retirement and how to structure income, we have been confronted with a restrictive set of rules. The key factors were the tax implications – both during the retirement period and at death. We didn’t have a great deal of flexibility. There might have been situations where it would have been appropriate to strip out the pension to reduce the pot before the client died, but this action had serious income tax implications.

Things have now moved on, as a worst-case scenario at death is now perhaps a 45% charge, where the figure might once have been as high as 82% or lost entirely with annuity purchase. So leaving your money in your pension pot is not necessarily such a bad thing anymore. Pensions should be considered as part of mainstream unencumbered assets, which you can use as an income source and valuable tax planning ‘wrapper’.

Using your pension fund alongside other investment wrappers such as ISAs, you’re able to maximise net spendable income for the smallest amount of capital spend. Since the advent of the new rules, we may choose to take less out of a fund in many circumstances and make use of other assets for income, protecting the pension fund to pass it on to the next generation.

In short, we’re being presented with a great opportunity to maximise client assets. We can now plan more efficiently in relation to tax, capital preservation, succession planning and income. So if you’re keen to live a better lifestyle and pass on more to beneficiaries, then it’s definitely important to start a conversation with one of our independent financial advisers.

Friday 1 May 2015

Back to the future

The best way to avoid end-of-year panic is to think about reverse planning.

Planning your tax year in reverse sounds like a strange idea, but that’s exactly what I advise my clients to do if they want to avoid unnecessary stress. Very often, they’re trying to do things at the last minute, when they really should have thought about them a lot earlier e.g. making best use of tax allowances, reliefs and exemptions. 

Take married couples, for example. On 6th April, new rules came into force that allow one spouse or civil partner to transfer 10% of their personal allowance to their other half, providing that neither of them pays tax above the basic rate. It’s a good opportunity in a situation where one partner has a low income and would otherwise have wasted their allowances. It does involve contacting HMRC immediately though and asking for the allowance to be transferred and tax codes to be updated.

And what about the child benefit charge? When one member of the family has an ‘adjusted net income’ of £50,000 or more, the benefit starts to reduce. And once the income exceeds £60,000, you lose it altogether. That could mean a gap of up to £1,800 a year if you have two kids. But if you think ahead and plan, the limits can be extended – through personal pension contributions, for instance, or gift-aid donations.

There’s another planning opportunity worth mentioning too. In April, the starting-rate tax band increased to £5,000 and the rate went down to zero. If you are a married couple or civil partners and you have relatively low pensions or earnings, but a higher amount of investment income, you need to consider your options. You could for example receive pensions to the value of around £10,600 and another £5,000 in gross interest without paying tax.

If you talk to your accountant at the earliest possible stage, you’re always better prepared to take advantage of opportunities. So don’t end up with a last-minute scramble.