In today’s high-interest-rate environment, the cash on your balance sheet is a powerful but often underutilised asset. Dynamic discounting allows you to turn your accounts payable into a high-yield, risk-free investment. Use our simple calculator below to estimate the potential annual return you could generate by offering early payments to your suppliers.
Calculating the ROI: A Worked Example
While every company’s results will differ, a simple, realistic example can illustrate the powerful returns a dynamic discounting programme can generate. Let’s look at a hypothetical company.
The Scenario:
- Company: Global Corp
- Total Annual Spend with Suppliers: S$100,000,000
- Percentage of Spend Addressable by Early Payments: 60%
- Average Supplier Discount Offered: 2%
- Average Days Paid Early: 20 days
Step 1: Calculate Total Addressable Spend
First, we determine the portion of spend that is eligible for the programme.
SGD 100,000,000 (Annual Spend) x 60% = SGD 60,000,000 (Addressable Spend)
Step 2: Calculate Annual Savings / Earnings
Next, we calculate the total value of the discounts captured on that addressable spend.
SGD 60,000,000 (Addressable Spend) x 2% (Discount) = SGD 1,200,000 (Annual Savings)
This SGD 1.2 million can be recognised as a direct reduction in the Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) or as other income, directly improving your company’s profitability.
Step 3: Calculate the Effective Annual Return (APR)
This is the most critical metric. It shows the annualised, risk-free return you are generating on your own cash. The formula is:
(Discount % / (100% – Discount %)) * (365 / Days Paid Early)
Using our example: (2% / 98%) * (365 / 20) = 37.2% APR
For a CFO in the current economic climate, a 37.2% annualised, low-risk return on working capital is an extremely compelling and strategically superior way to deploy company cash.
How to Interpret Your Results
The example above highlights two key metrics that are critical for a CFO:
Annual Savings / Earnings
This is the direct, bottom-line impact. It represents the total value of discounts captured by paying your suppliers early, which can be used to reduce your Cost of Goods Sold (COGS).
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)
This is arguably the most important number. It shows the risk-free return you are generating on your own cash. If this APR is higher than the return you get from bank deposits, dynamic discounting is a strategically superior way to deploy your working capital.
The Assumptions Behind the Calculation
This example provides an estimate based on a standard formula. The actual ROI will depend on factors such as your supplier adoption rate and the specific discount terms you set. A modern digital platform is key to maximising these results. Learn more in our full Guide to Dynamic Discounting.
A Platform to Realise These Returns at Scale
An estimate is a great starting point, but a real-world programme requires a powerful platform. The TASConnect platform automates the entire dynamic discounting process, from offering discounts to processing payments, making it easy to generate these returns at scale. Contact us for a personalised ROI analysis.