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Metrics explained · 7 min read

Working capital in stock analysis: what to review

Working capital shows how cash moves through the operating cycle and can reveal timing, demand, supply chain, or collection questions.

Published 2026-04-26Educational research support, not personal guidance.

Working capital links operations and cash

Working capital usually refers to current assets minus current liabilities. In research, the components often matter more than the headline number.

Receivables, inventory, and payables can reveal how sales convert into cash and how the company manages operating timing.

Receivables show collection questions

Rising receivables can reflect growth, longer payment terms, delayed collections, or customer stress. The right interpretation depends on revenue growth, customer mix, and industry norms.

Days sales outstanding and filing notes can help provide more detail.

Inventory shows demand and planning questions

Inventory growth can signal preparation for demand, supply chain buffering, slower sales, or product mix changes.

Review inventory beside revenue, margins, cash flow, and management commentary.

Payables and cash conversion complete the loop

Payables can support cash flow when payment timing extends, but persistent changes deserve context. Cash conversion metrics help connect working capital to operating cash flow.

Working capital analysis is strongest when tied back to the business model and sector cycle.

Key takeaway

Working capital analysis turns balance sheet changes into operating questions about collections, inventory, payables, and cash conversion.