The M&A landscape is increasingly complex, with rising interest rates, inflation, and tighter credit markets reshaping deal structures. As we approach 2025, cash flow stability and debt service capability are under greater scrutiny. Investors, lenders, and buyers demand deeper financial insights beyond revenue and EBITDA, making Free Cash Flow (FCF) and Cash Available for Debt Service (CADS) critical for assessing a company’s financial health and resilience.
With rising capital costs and stricter lending conditions, profitability alone is no longer enough. Investors, lenders, and buyers demand deeper insights into cash flow and financial resilience. For lower middle market deal-makers, FCF and CADS are essential. While General Partners (GPs) still have access to capital, they are deploying it more cautiously, and lenders are less forgiving of cash flow gaps. Prioritizing FCF and CADS provides a clearer view of a business’s ability to sustain operations, manage debt, and withstand economic downturns. In today’s high-cost environment, businesses must maintain strong cash flow to meet obligations while preserving growth potential.
Definition: Free Cash Flow (FCF) represents the cash a business generates after covering its operating expenses, taxes, and capital expenditures (CapEx). It is the best indicator of how much money is actually available for reinvestment, debt repayment, or shareholder returns.
Why FCF Matters:
Definition: CADS measures the amount of cash available to cover both interest and principal payments on a company’s outstanding debt after all operating costs are paid.
Why CADS Matters:
Definition: EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) is a widely used measure of operational profitability. However, it does not reflect the actual cash available for debt repayment or reinvestment.
Why EBITDA Still Matters:
The Limitation: EBITDA does not account for CapEx, working capital needs, or debt service, making it insufficient for determining a company’s ability to sustain long-term growth.
Definition: Measures the cash generated by normal business operations before capital expenditures and financing activities.
Why OCF Matters:
Definition: Compares a company’s available cash flow to its debt obligations.
Why DSCR Matters:
Definition: The difference between current assets and current liabilities, representing a company’s short-term financial health.
Why Working Capital Matters:
While EBITDA helps understand profitability, FCF and CADS provide the real financial insights needed to make sound investment decisions.
For lower middle market deal-makers, these cash flow metrics are no longer just strategic advantages—they are absolute necessities. Lenders are more selective, LPs are deploying capital more cautiously, and deal scrutiny has never been higher. By focusing on FCF and CADS, buyers and investors can ensure they are acquiring businesses with strong financial fundamentals, setting themselves up for sustainable, high-value transactions in this evolving market. For fund managers, the pressure extends beyond acquiring strong assets—it includes ensuring that investments can withstand economic uncertainty. With financing becoming more expensive and harder to secure, CADS is now a critical metric for evaluating debt sustainability, while FCF ensures that portfolio companies have the cash flow to fuel growth post-acquisition.
As we approach 2025, economic conditions will continue to shift with potential fluctuations in interest rates, inflation, and credit availability. However, one constant remains—the need for deeper financial insights and a focus on cash flow metrics.
Are you incorporating these key cash flow metrics into your deal-making strategy?
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