Why I Always Stress-Test Cash Flow Before Closing a Deal

One of the most valuable lessons I’ve learned in acquisitions is the importance of stress-testing cash flow. It’s not enough to look at financial statements and assume the future will look like the past. I need to know how the business performs under stress, what happens if revenue dips, expenses rise, or customers delay payments.
By stress-testing cash flow, I avoid surprises after closing. I know whether the company can withstand shocks, service debt, and still provide a return.
Why Stress-Testing Matters
Cash flow is the lifeblood of a business. If it dries up, even a profitable company on paper can fail. Stress-testing matters because it reveals:
- Whether debt service is sustainable under downside scenarios
- How sensitive is revenue to churn, seasonality, or price changes
- Whether working capital cycles create liquidity gaps
- How resilient is the company to external shocks
I don’t just want to know the upside; I want to know the downside and whether I can live with it.
My Early Mistakes
In one acquisition, I relied on historical financials without testing what would happen if revenue dipped. Within months, a key customer left. Cash flow collapsed, and I had to inject personal funds to cover payroll.
In another deal, I didn’t account for how inventory tied up cash during seasonal spikes. Even though the company was profitable, cash flow was negative at critical times.
Both experiences reinforced that cash flow isn’t about paper profits, it’s about liquidity under real-world stress.
How I Stress-Test Cash Flow
I use a simple but rigorous framework:
1. Base Case
I model cash flow using historical averages, assuming things continue as they have.
2. Downside Case
I reduce revenue by 10–20%, increase expenses by 5–10%, and test whether the business can still cover debt and payroll.
3. Severe Case
I model extreme scenarios like losing a top customer, a recession, or a sharp cost increase. I ask: Can the business survive six months under this pressure?
4. Working Capital Impact
I layer in delayed receivables, faster payables, and seasonal swings to see how cash balances move.
5. Debt Service Coverage Ratio
I check whether cash flow covers loan payments with a healthy margin, not just barely.
What I Learn From Stress-Testing
Stress-testing tells me whether:
- The deal is viable with debt financing
- I need more working capital reserves
- Valuation should be adjusted for risk
- I should walk away entirely
How Stress-Testing Affects Valuation and Structure
If stress-testing reveals fragility, I adjust deal terms. I may:
- Push for more seller financing to share risk
- Lower the purchase price
- Require a working capital buffer at closing
- Walk away if downside survival is weak
How I Use Stress-Testing Post-Acquisition
Even after buying, I continue to stress-test periodically. It helps me prepare for downturns and build cash reserves. It also guides decisions about reinvestment and distributions.
Final Thoughts
Stress-testing cash flow has saved me from bad deals and prepared me for challenging transitions. It ensures I don’t just buy businesses that look good on paper, but businesses that can survive real-world shocks.
That’s why I always run multiple scenarios, test working capital, and protect myself with smart deal structures.
Because in the end, acquisitions aren’t about best-case scenarios, they’re about whether the business can survive the worst and still provide stability.
I continue sharing my acquisition playbook, strategies, and lessons at DrConnorRobertson.com, where I document how I build resilience into every deal.