Liquidity Management
Liquidity management is the process of making sure the company can meet its financial obligations on time without holding more idle cash than necessary.
In plain language, liquidity management answers a practical question: can the company pay what it needs to pay, when it needs to pay it?
The real problem liquidity management solves
Most companies do not fail because they do not understand accounting. They get into trouble when they run out of usable cash. A company may have cash in the group overall, but that cash may be trapped in the wrong country, held by the wrong entity, or simply not available quickly enough.
That is why treasury pays close attention to liquidity rather than just total cash.
What treasury looks at
Treasury usually looks at several things at once:
- today's available cash
- this week's major payments
- expected receipts
- shortfalls at entity or country level
- borrowing capacity
- whether surplus cash can be moved or invested
This is where cash flow forecasting becomes essential. Forecasting tells treasury what may happen next; liquidity management turns that information into action.
Tools treasury may use
Different companies manage liquidity in different ways, but common tools include:
- cash pooling
- short-term borrowing
- short-term investing
- intercompany lending
- credit facilities with banking partners
The right mix depends on the company's structure, bank network, and local restrictions.
Why "cash in the group" is not always enough
A beginner often hears, "the company has enough cash," and assumes the liquidity problem is solved. In treasury, that is not always true. Cash may be in a country with restrictions, in an entity that cannot easily lend it out, or in an account that is not connected to the payment flow.
That is why bank relationship management, legal structure, and local market rules can matter just as much as headline cash balances.
A useful treasury mindset
Good liquidity management is not about maximizing cash at all costs. It is about balancing safety, flexibility, efficiency, and cost. Treasury wants enough cash to stay safe, but not so much idle cash that the business becomes inefficient.