Choosing the Right Working Capital Strategy in 2026 – What Every Business Should Consider

Miguel Serricchio Last Modified : Feb 4, 2026
Fact-checked by: Bruce Sayer

As we enter 2026, the question facing many finance leaders is the same: What is the right approach to financing working capital for my business in today’s environment?

The answer is rarely a one-size-fits-all. The right working capital strategy depends on a company’s supply chain dynamics, customer payment behavior, cash conversion cycle, and overall financial objectives.

Below, we break down the key considerations behind the most common financing options used by businesses today.

Start with the Basics: What Problem Are You Actually Solving?

Before selecting a financing solution, it’s critical to define the underlying objective:

  • Is the goal to reduce Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)?

Slow-paying customers can create liquidity gaps, even in growing companies.

  • Are you trying to extend Days Payable Outstanding (DPO)?

When suppliers require faster payment terms, cash flow can become compressed.

  • Are inventory levels causing a drag on working capital?

Higher carrying costs, supply chain volatility, or slow-moving inventory can tie up capital even when sales remain strong.

  • Are you simply constrained by available liquidity?

Growth, seasonality, acquisitions, or market volatility can push a business beyond the limits of an existing credit facility, even when operations are healthy.

Understanding the root cause of the working capital challenge helps determine the right path forward.

How Is the Current Economic Environment Affecting Working Capital?

2026 brings its own set of macro pressures:

  • Tariffs and trade policy uncertainty are increasing costs and compressing margins.
  • Supply chain volatility remains an issue for importers and manufacturers.
  • Interest rate sensitivity is still top of mind for businesses managing leverage.
  • Labor markets continue to drive wage pressure.

These conditions make working capital less predictable and underscore the importance of choosing the right financing strategy that can adapt as conditions change.

The “Quick Fix” Trap: Merchant Cash Advances (MCAs)

When liquidity tightens, some businesses turn to Merchant Cash Advances (MCAs) for immediate access to capital. MCAs are known for speed and minimal underwriting, which can be appealing in urgent situations.

Key considerations

  • Speed of approval and funding.
  • Minimal documentation and underwriting requirements.
  • Short-term liquidity for urgent needs.
  • Repayment frequency and impact on daily cash flow.
  • Effective cost of capital.

MCAs are cash-flow based, not asset-based. This funding option can help address short-term timing gaps, but it is rarely a substitute for a sustainable working capital strategy. For most businesses, MCAs work best as a temporary bridge, not a foundation.

A/R Financing or Factoring: A Flexible, Non-Debt Alternative

Accounts Receivable (A/R) Financing, commonly referred to as factoring, converts invoices into immediate cash. It remains a widely used working capital solution for businesses needing to reduce DSO, improve liquidity, and support growth without taking on traditional debt. Today’s programs often integrate seamlessly into existing AR billing and collections processes.

Key considerations

  • Off-balance sheet, non-debt structure.
  • Flexibility in structure and advance rates.
  • Ability to incorporate a stretch component against inventory.
  • Scalability is tied directly to receivables growth.
  • Fewer or no covenants compared to traditional loans.
  • Faster approvals than traditional loans.
  • Applicable for companies with tight margins, rapid growth, or weaker credit profiles.

A/R financing is particularly effective for B2B businesses with invoiced receivables and extended customer payment terms that need to accelerate cash flow and fund growth.

Asset-Based Lending (ABL): Structured, Scalable, and Reliable

Asset-Based Lending (ABL) facilities provide capital secured by a company’s assets, such as accounts receivable, inventory, and equipment. Availability is based primarily on the quality and eligibility of these assets, rather than cash flow or profitability alone.

Key considerations

  • Borrowing base determines available capacity, typically based on eligible receivables and inventory.
  • Advance rates are set according to asset type and quality.
  • Facilities scale with asset growth or contraction.
  • Reporting includes regular borrowing base certificates and periodic field exams.
  • Covenants and monitoring focus on asset performance rather than cash flow alone.
  • Often lower cost than unsecured alternatives, reflecting the collateralized structure.

Asset-Based Lending (ABL) is best suited for asset-rich businesses with significant receivables, inventory, or equipment that need scalable, flexible capital to support growth, seasonal fluctuations, or operational complexity.

Supply Chain Finance (SCF): Optimizing DPO Without Disrupting Suppliers

Supply Chain Finance (also referred to as Early Pay or Supplier Finance) is an increasingly important working capital tool for businesses looking to extend Days Payable Outstanding (DPO) while preserving strong supplier relationships.

Unlike traditional financing, SCF leverages the buyer’s credit strength and payment certainty to provide suppliers with early payment at competitive rates, without adding debt to the buyer’s balance sheet.

Key considerations

  • Extends DPO while enabling suppliers to access early payment.
  • Improves supplier liquidity and financial stability.
  • Strengthens supplier relationships and supply chain resilience.
  • Competitive pricing rates based on the buyer’s credit profile.
  • No balance sheet debt for the buyer.
  • Can support ESG, supplier diversity, and supply chain resiliency initiatives.

SCF is most effective for businesses with large, recurring supplier bases where payment terms compress cash flow or where supplier financial health is critical to operations. When implemented effectively, SCF improves the entire cash conversion cycle, not just one side of the balance sheet.

Traditional Line of Credit vs. Alternative Capital: Aligning the right tools

As CFOs plan for 2026, a key question emerges: How should different sources of capital work together to support the business? Traditional lines of credit remain a foundational component of many capital structures, particularly when:

  • Performance is stable.
  • Borrowing needs are predictable.
  • Financial metrics align with bank underwriting requirements.

At the same time, alternative capital solutions – such as AR financing, ABL, SCF, or hybrid facilities – can complement bank relationships by offering:

  • Additional flexibility during periods of growth or transition
  • Capital structures aligned to working capital cycles
  • Liquidity driven by asset quality and operational performance

In 2026, having the right lender aligned with your working capital cycle is more important than ever.

Conclusion

Working capital strategy is not a static decision; it’s an ongoing discipline. As you plan for 2026, the real question isn’t “Which product is best?”, it’s rather, “Which financing structure best supports where my business is TODAY and where it’s going TOMORROW?”

Working capital is the engine of every company. Choosing the right approach can unlock growth, stabilize cash flow, and protect your business during uncertainty.

Contact us to evaluate your working capital strategy and design a financing structure that aligns with your cash conversion cycle, growth objectives, and the realities of today’s operating environment.

Key Takeaways

  • Tariffs and trade policy uncertainty, supply chain volatility, interest rate sensitivity, and labor market pressures make working capital less predictable and increase the importance of choosing the right financing strategy that can adapt as conditions change.
  • The right working capital strategy depends on a company’s supply chain dynamics, customer payment behavior, cash conversion cycle, and overall financial objectives.
  • Understanding the root cause of the working capital challenge helps determine the right path forward.
  • Choosing the right approach can unlock growth, stabilize cash flow, and protect your business during uncertainty.
ABOUT eCapital

At eCapital, we accelerate business growth by delivering fast, flexible access to capital through cutting-edge technology and deep industry insight.

Across North America and the U.K., we’ve redefined how small and medium-sized businesses access funding—eliminating friction, speeding approvals, and empowering clients with access to the capital they need to move forward. With the capacity to fund facilities from $5 million to $250 million, we support a wide range of business needs at every stage.

With a powerful blend of innovation, scalability, and personalized service, we’re not just a funding provider, we’re a strategic partner built for what’s next.

About the writer
Miguel Serricchio Headshot
Miguel Serricchio

Miguel Serricchio is the Managing Director - Channel Development at eCapital, where he leads all sales and partnership initiatives across the business. He joined LSQ (now part of eCapital) in 2018 and has since curated many of the company's largest and most strategic referral sources, facilitated its largest invoice finance partnership, and is the company’s resident EXIM expert, spearheading the effort to create numerous Supply Chain Finance Guarantee programs for US exporters.

A 35-year veteran of B2B and international finance, Miguel has led service and technology innovation at some of the largest financial institutions across the globe, including Citigroup, and several national and regional banks in the United States. He holds a Bachelor of International Commerce in Economy/Finance from the Argentine University of Enterprise (UADE).

Miguel has also served on EXIM’s Council on Small Business, assisting SMBs with strategies to better compete in global marketplaces and guiding public policy to help American businesses.

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