How to Build a Stronger Balance Sheet During Profitable Years
A profitable year creates opportunity, but it does not automatically strengthen the
business.
That depends on how the results are managed.
For agricultural operations, strong years can either improve the overall financial position or
simply pass through with little long-term impact. The difference comes down to how
intentionally those years are used.
Why the Balance Sheet Matters More Than It Gets Credit For
During a strong year, most of the focus goes to the income statement. Revenue is up,
margins improve, and the operation feels productive.
But the balance sheet is what carries that performance forward.
It reflects liquidity, debt levels, and how much flexibility the business has going into the
next cycle. Those factors often matter more than a single year of profitability, especially in
an industry where conditions can change quickly.
A strong balance sheet gives the operation room to adjust. A weak one limits options, even
after a profitable year.
Using Strong Years to Improve Position, Not Just Results
When margins improve, there is usually more flexibility in how cash is used.
Some of that will go toward taxes, operating costs, and reinvestment. Beyond that, there is
an opportunity to improve how the business is structured financially.
That might not feel urgent in a strong year, but it tends to have the most lasting impact.
Debt Reduction Should Be Measured, Not Reactive
Reducing debt is often one of the first considerations, and for good reason.
Lower leverage can improve financial ratios, reduce interest expense, and create more
room in future cash flow. It can also strengthen the business’s position with lenders.
At the same time, using too much cash to accelerate debt reduction can create a different
kind of pressure. Liquidity still needs to support the operation through the cycle.
The goal is not to eliminate debt as quickly as possible. It is to manage it in a way that
supports both stability and flexibility.
Cash Reserves Are What Carry You Between Cycles
Strong years can create a false sense of consistency.
In agriculture, that rarely holds. Weather, input costs, and commodity pricing can shift
quickly, and those changes tend to show up in cash flow before anything else.
Building reserves during profitable years helps offset that variability. It allows the operation
to absorb changes without immediately relying on short-term borrowing or making rushed
decisions.
Reserves are not idle. They are what give the business time and options when conditions
change.
Capital Purchases Still Need to Make Sense
Capital spending tends to increase during profitable years, especially when tax planning is
part of the conversation.
That is not necessarily a problem, but the decision still needs to stand on its own.
Equipment and infrastructure should improve efficiency, support production, or address a
real operational need. If the primary driver is reducing taxable income, it is worth taking a
step back.
A purchase that does not fit the long-term needs of the operation can create more pressure
later, even if it provides a short-term tax benefit.
Working Capital Is Often Overlooked
A stronger balance sheet is not just about long-term assets and liabilities.
Working capital plays a central role in how the business functions day to day. Improving
liquidity during strong years can make a noticeable difference in how the operation handles
seasonal demands.
That may involve increasing current assets, reducing short-term obligations, or simply
being more intentional about how cash is managed throughout the cycle.
Ignoring this area often leads to the same situation many operations face, where
profitability improves but cash still feels tight.
The Impact Shows Up Over Time
Balance sheet strength is not built in a single year.
It comes from consistent decisions over multiple cycles. Profitable years provide a better
opportunity to make those decisions, but the benefit comes from how they carry forward.
Operations that use strong years to improve their position tend to have more flexibility
when conditions tighten. They are better positioned with lenders, more comfortable
managing cash flow, and more prepared to take advantage of opportunities when they
arise.
Where DBC Can Help
At DBC, these conversations usually happen after a strong year when the focus starts to
shift from performance to positioning.
The question is not just how the operation performed, but what that performance changed.
Did it improve liquidity, reduce risk, or create more flexibility going forward?
If the answer is unclear, it is worth taking the time to step back and walk through the
balance sheet in detail. That process often leads to more deliberate decisions and a
stronger position going into the next cycle.
This article provides general tax and accounting insights and is not intended as advice
specific to your organization or a substitute for personal consultation. We do not provide
legal advice. Because every organization’s circumstances are unique, we encourage you to
consult with your legal, tax, or accounting advisor regarding your specific situation.