The Uncollected Promise - Accounts Receivable

Good morning, class. Please, settle down. Today we discuss an asset that is as much a psychological game as it is a mathematical one: Accounts Receivable (AR).

As a financial analyst in 2026, you must view AR as Interest-Free Loans you are giving to your customers. If you don't manage them, your customers will happily run their businesses using your cash.

1. The Anatomy of AR: Trade vs. Non-Trade

On a balance sheet like that of Infosys or Hindustan Unilever, you will see "Trade Receivables." It’s important to distinguish between two types:

  • Trade Receivables: Money owed specifically for your core products or services. This is the "lifeblood" of your working capital.
  • Non-Trade Receivables: Amounts due from sources outside core sales, such as insurance claims, tax refunds, or loans to employees.

Professor's Note: In 2026, we also see the rise of Contract Assets (under Ind AS 115). Unlike AR, which is an unconditional right to payment, a contract asset means you’ve done work but still have more hurdles to jump before you can legally send the invoice.

2. The Aging Schedule: Taking the Pulse of the Debt

We don't just look at the total AR; we look at the Aging. An Aging Schedule categorizes every rupee owed to you by how long it has been outstanding.

Category

Amount

Prob. of Collection

Action Required

0–30 Days

₹500 Cr

99%

Polite automated reminder.

31–60 Days

₹150 Cr

90%

Personal follow-up email.

61–90 Days

₹50 Cr

75%

Phone call from Credit Manager.

90+ Days

₹20 Cr

40%

Legal notice / Collection agency.

The Insight: The older a debt gets, the less likely you are to ever see that money. In 2026, AI-driven dashboards now predict which customers will hit the 90-day mark before they even miss their first payment.

3. Valuation: The Allowance for Doubtful Accounts (AFDA)

Accounting is governed by Prudence. We cannot pretend we will collect 100% of our AR if history tells us otherwise. We use a "Contra-Asset" account called the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts.

Calculation Example: The Aging Method

Imagine Reliance Retail has ₹1,000 Crores in AR. Based on 2026 historical data:

  • Current (₹800 Cr): 1% estimated loss = ₹8 Cr
  • Overdue (₹200 Cr): 10% estimated loss = ₹20 Cr
  • Total AFDA Required: ₹28 Crores.

The Journal Entry:

  • Debit: Bad Debt Expense ₹28 Cr (Reduces Profit)
  • Credit: Allowance for Doubtful Accounts ₹28 Cr (Reduces Assets)

4. Critical Metrics: DSO and Turnover

To judge a CFO’s efficiency, we use two key "speedometers":

I. Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)

DSO =

If your DSO is 60 days but your terms are "Net 30," your customers are essentially using you as a free bank for a full month.

II. AR Turnover Ratio

AR Turnover = Net Credit Sales \ Average Accounts Receivable

A higher number is better. It shows how many times per year you "clear" your entire receivable balance.

5. Case Study: The 2026 "Tech vs. FMCG" Divide

Compare Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) with Marico.

  • TCS (Services): Often has higher DSO (60–90 days) because large global corporations have slow, bureaucratic payment cycles.
  • Marico (FMCG): Has lower DSO (15–30 days) because distributors must pay quickly to keep the soap and oil flowing to retail shelves.

6. Summary: The 2026 Strategy

As we wrap up, remember that AR is a Customer Experience function.

  • Embedded Payments: In 2026, leading firms include "Pay Now" links directly in digital invoices, reducing "friction."
  • Supply Chain Finance: Many firms now "sell" their high-quality AR to banks (factoring) to get cash instantly, rather than waiting 90 days.