Answer in one sentence: Mechanical engineering companies face above-average liquidity risk due to long production cycles and project-based payment structures.
The mechanical engineering industry faces unique cash-flow challenges that other industries do not encounter to this intensity. 82% of all company bankruptcies are caused by poor cash-flow management – a statistic especially threatening for manufacturing companies.
Mechanical engineering companies struggle with the following specific problems:
“Over 60% of SMEs struggle with liquidity gaps caused by late payments, seasonal fluctuations or unexpected expenses,” confirms a recent INNOPAY study. For mechanical engineers this issue is exacerbated by the complexity of their value chains.
The consequences of poor liquidity planning hit mechanical engineering companies particularly hard:
A typical scenario: A mid-sized mechanical engineering firm receives a major order of €2 million. Production requires material and personnel costs of €1.4 million over six months before the first milestone payment is made. Without systematic liquidity planning, success quickly turns into an existential crisis.
Systematic liquidity management starts with understanding the cash-conversion cycle and continuously monitoring critical key figures.
The cash-conversion cycle in mechanical engineering differs fundamentally from other industries due to its complexity and length:
Typical mechanical engineering cash-flow cycle:
These 240-300 days between material purchase and payment receipt require precise working-capital planning. Without systematic monitoring, critical financing gaps emerge.
Successful liquidity control is based on five decisive KPIs:
• Cash-Conversion Cycle: Measures the days between investment and payment receipt (target value for mechanical engineering: 180-240 days)
• Working Capital Ratio: Ratio of current assets to current liabilities (target: 1.5-2.0)
• Current Ratio: Liquidity of the first degree for short-term payment capability (minimum value: 1.2)
• Days Payable Outstanding: Average payment time to suppliers (optimum: 45-60 days)
• Inventory Turnover: Frequency of inventory turnover as an indicator of capital tie-up (industry average: 4-6 times annually)
A profitable company can still fall into a liquidity crisis – a phenomenon that occurs particularly often in mechanical engineering. The reason: timing is more decisive than profit margins.
Critical distinction:
A mechanical engineering company can have highly profitable contracts yet still fail if cash-inflows are not synchronized with expenditures. Liquidity shortfall leads to business failure more often than actual losses.
Excel-based forecasting templates provide SMEs with a cost-efficient basis for professional liquidity planning with scenario functionality.
8-step process to create a liquidity forecast:
Essential template components:
• Rolling 13-week forecast with daily liquidity view
• Project-based revenue categorization by probability and timing
• Automated scenario calculations for different payment assumptions
• Graphical liquidity curve with critical warning thresholds
For growing mechanical engineering companies, specialized software solutions offer extended functionalities:
Commitly (from €45/month with annual payment): Focus on cash-flow forecasting with direct bank integration and automatic categorizations. Particularly suitable for project-based companies.
Tidely (from €45/month with annual payment): German solution with strong focus on SME needs, offering liquidity planning with scenario management and early warning system.
Finban (price on request): Enterprise solution with comprehensive treasury functions, ideal for larger mechanical engineers with complex group structures.
Evaluation criteria for software selection:
• Integration with existing ERP software (SAP, Microsoft Dynamics)
• Automated data imports from accounting and banking
• Project-based liquidity planning with milestone tracking
• German compliance and GDPR conformity
• Scalability for growing companies
Successful integration requires a systematic approach:
The integration reduces manual effort by up to 70% and significantly improves forecasting quality through real-time data.
Answer in one sentence: Daily liquidity monitoring with automated early-warning indicators is indispensable for project-based payment structures.
5-step routine for daily monitoring:
Early-warning indicators for critical situations:
• Liquidity falls below the equivalent of 2 weeks of expenses
• Receivables defaults exceed 5% of open items
• Customer payment terms extend by more than 14 days
• Payables periods climb above 60 days
Structured milestone management significantly reduces payment risks:
Optimal milestone structure for mechanical engineering:
Strategic supplier payments can improve liquidity by 10-15%:
The best results are achieved by companies that build trusting, long-term supplier relationships which also allow flexibility in difficult phases.
Answer in one sentence: Systematic scenario planning with defined trigger points enables proactive action before liquidity crises.
Four critical crisis scenarios for mechanical engineering firms:
Scenario 1: Major customer payment default
Scenario 2: Critical machine breakdown
Scenario 3: Supply-chain disruption
Scenario 4: Economic downturn
Calculation of the optimal liquidity buffer:
Mechanical-engineering SMEs should calculate their liquidity reserves according to the following formula:
· Base buffer: 2 months’ expenses (minimum requirement)
· Project-risk surcharge: +0.5 months’ expenses per large project > €500k
· Seasonality surcharge: +1 month’s expenses for > 30% seasonal fluctuations
· Industry-risk surcharge: +0.5 months’ expenses in volatile target markets
Example calculation for a mechanical engineering firm:
Automated trigger points for proactive action:
Liquidity triggers:
• Yellow: Liquidity falls below equivalent of 6 weeks of expenses → activate payment prioritisation
• Orange: Liquidity falls below equivalent of 4 weeks of expenses → extend credit lines
• Red: Liquidity falls below equivalent of 2 weeks of expenses → initiate emergency financing
Operational triggers:
• Receivables ageing exceeds 90 days → intensified debtor management
• Payment defaults exceed 3% → review credit insurance
• Project milestone delays > 14 days → escalate to customer
Mechanical engineering companies should hold 2–3 months’ expenses as a base liquidity buffer. With longer project cycles or volatile markets, 3–4 months’ expenses may be required. The exact amount depends on project size, customer creditworthiness and seasonality.
Project-based mechanical engineering companies should update their 13-week forecast weekly and monitor their current liquidity daily. In critical phases or large projects, daily forecast adjustment may be required.
Critical warning signals are: supplier payment delays over 60 days, increasing receivables ageing over 90 days, cash balances falling despite profitability, frequent utilisation of credit lines over 80%, and project-milestone delays over 14 days.
Implement clear milestone payments with 30% advance payment, automated invoicing within 5 days, early‐payment discounts of 2–3%, systematic dunning from day 7, and binding acceptance protocols for large customers to enable rapid invoicing.
Immediate measures: fully utilise available credit lines, negotiate payment deferrals with strategic suppliers, sell short-term receivables via factoring, stop all non-critical expenditures, and engage professional restructuring consulting.
For smaller SMEs (up to approx. 200 employees) Excel templates with manual maintenance are suitable. Mid-sized companies benefit from Tidely or Commitly with automated imports. Larger mechanical engineering firms should prefer integrated ERP solutions with treasury modules.
CCC = Days Sales Outstanding + Days Inventory Outstanding – Days Payable Outstanding. For mechanical engineering a typical value: 45 days receivables + 120 days inventory – 45 days payables = 120 days cash-conversion cycle.
External consulting is appropriate when: recurring liquidity bottlenecks despite profitability, company growth over 50% annually, complex project financing over €5 million, impending company sale, or when internal resources for systematic monitoring are lacking.
[S1] U.S. Bank Study by Jessie Hagen – Why Small Businesses Fail and How to Succeed in First Year (2016). https://cocountant.com/blog/growing-a-business/why-small-businesses-fail-and-how-to-succeed-in-first-year/
[S2] INNOPAY – Bridging the Cash Flow Gap: How SMEs Can Overcome Liquidity Challenges (2024). https://www.innopay.com/en/publications/bridging-cash-flow-gap-how-smes-can-overcome-liquidity-challenges
[S3] Irwin Insolvency – How Many Businesses Fail Due to Cash Flow Problems (2023). https://www.irwin-insolvency.co.uk/how-many-businesses-fail-due-to-cash-flow-problems/
[S4] Ascend Bank – 10 Strategies for Effective Cash Flow Management for Manufacturing Businesses (2024). https://ascend.bank/news/10-strategies-for-effective-cash-flow-management-for-manufacturing-businesses/
[S5] HighRadius – Cash Flow in Manufacturing Business (2024). https://www.highradius.com/resources/Blog/cash-flow-in-manufacturing-business/
[S6] Tidely – Liquidity Software Comparison (2024). https://www.tidely.com/en/blog-posts/liquidity-software-comparison
[S7] Score – The #1 Reason Small Businesses Fail and How to Avoid It (2023). https://www.score.org/resource/blog-post/1-reason-small-businesses-fail-and-how-avoid-it
Copyright © 2025 Peter Littau
Copyright © 2025 Peter Littau