Cash is a Fact, Profit is an Opinion.
“Cash is a Fact, Profit is an Opinion” is a phrase that was popularised by economist and business professor, Alfred Rappaport. The phrase highlights the difference between two key concepts in accounting: cash flow and profit.
Cash flow and profit are two sides of the same coin; cash flow provides the present, profit secures the future. Striving for both and striking the balance is the key to success.
Cash is a Fact, Profit is an Opinion: The Construction Industry's Survival Truth
In construction, balance sheets lie. Cash flow statements don't.
When Alfred Rappaport stated "Cash is a fact, profit is an opinion," he could have been speaking directly to the construction sector. No industry better demonstrates this brutal financial reality.
Construction companies routinely collapse while reporting profits. How? Because accounting profit is an artificial construct—a mathematical conclusion based on assumptions, allocations and accounting policies. It exists on paper but not necessarily in your bank account.
Cash tells a different story. It represents the actual money available to pay suppliers, meet payroll and fund operations. No interpretation required.
Why construction is uniquely vulnerable to this disconnect:
Projects often require substantial upfront expenditure before any payment
Payment terms frequently stretch 60-90 days, creating massive cash gaps
Retention holds back significant portions of earned revenue
Variations and claims can take months or years to resolve
Subcontractor payments may be due before client payments arrive
Consider the reality: A £10M project reporting 5% profit (£500K) can easily consume £2M in working capital during delivery. The accounting profit becomes meaningless if you run out of cash mid-project.
Construction's profit illusions:
Recognition of profit on uncertified variations
Accrued income on disputed change orders
Underestimated costs to complete
Optimistic recovery assumptions on claims
Delayed recognition of project losses
The savviest contractors ruthlessly prioritise cash management through:
Front-loaded payment schedules
Accelerated certification processes
Reduced retention percentages
Supply chain payment terms aligned with client payments
Rigorous change order management
Profitable contractors fail every day. Cash-positive contractors survive downturns, supply chain disruptions and client insolvencies.
The construction businesses that thrive over decades understand that while profit keeps score, cash keeps you alive. In an industry where insolvency is common, survival depends on managing cash as your primary metric, not accounting profit.
Your bank balance doesn't care what your profit forecast says. Neither should you.