One of the most common mistakes in financial analysis is simple:
Comparing numbers without context.
A working capital ratio that looks “healthy” in one business
can be a warning sign in another.
And yet, many decisions are made based on generic benchmarks.
Why Benchmarks Can Be Misleading
Benchmarks are useful.
They provide a reference point.
They offer perspective.
But they also create a false sense of certainty.
Because not all businesses operate the same way.
Different Industries, Different Realities
Let’s take a simple example.
A retail business typically:
- sells quickly
- collects cash immediately
- pays suppliers later
This often results in:
- low working capital
- sometimes even negative working capital
And that can be a sign of efficiency.
Now compare that with a manufacturing company.
It typically:
- holds inventory for longer
- produces before selling
- offers credit to customers
This leads to:
- higher working capital needs
- longer cash conversion cycles
Same metric.
Completely different meaning.
The Role of the Business Model
Industry is only part of the story.
The business model matters just as much.
Two companies in the same sector can have very different dynamics depending on:
- their pricing strategy
- their supply chain
- their customer terms
This is why a single “ideal ratio” rarely applies universally.
What Benchmarks Are Actually For
Benchmarks should not be used to judge performance instantly.
They should be used to:
- ask better questions
- identify unusual patterns
- detect potential inefficiencies
They are a starting point.
Not a conclusion.
The Link With the Cash Conversion Cycle
Benchmarks become much more meaningful when combined with your cash conversion cycle.
Because the cycle explains:
- how long cash is tied up
- where inefficiencies exist
- how operations affect liquidity
Without that context, benchmarks remain superficial.
A Practical Way to Use Benchmarks
Instead of asking:
Am I above or below the benchmark?
Ask:
- Why am I different?
- Is this difference intentional or accidental?
- Is it creating pressure or efficiency?
These questions lead to better decisions.
When Benchmarks Become Dangerous
Benchmarks become a problem when they drive blind decisions.
For example:
- reducing inventory just to “match” a ratio
- tightening credit without understanding customer impact
- delaying payments without considering supplier relationships
Numbers should guide thinking.
Not replace it.
Final Reflection
Benchmarks can be helpful.
But they can also be misleading.
A number only becomes meaningful when you understand what drives it.
Because in the end, financial analysis is not about comparing figures.
It is about interpreting reality.
And reality is always more complex than a benchmark.
