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What Is Cash Flow?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 9, 20262 min read
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Cash flow is the net movement of money into and out of your accounts over a period. Positive cash flow means more comes in than goes out — you're building. Negative cash flow means you're spending more than earning — you're declining.

The Calculation

Cash flow = Income - Expenses

If you earn $5,000/month and spend $4,200, you have +$800 cash flow. If you spend $5,300, you have -$300 cash flow.

Why This Matters

Positive cash flow is the engine of wealth building. $800/month positive cash flow invested at 7% over 30 years becomes $1.12 million. The same -$300 cash flow drives debt accumulation and financial stress.

Most people don't actually know their cash flow. They see their account balance and assume it's fine. But balance is a snapshot; cash flow is direction.

Examples

Two people earning different incomes but with vastly different cash flows:

Person A: $75,000 income, $60,000 spending = +$15,000 annually (+$1,250/month) Person B: $120,000 income, $130,000 spending = -$10,000 annually (-$833/month)

Person A with lower income has positive cash flow. Person B with higher income has negative cash flow and is going backward.

Managing Cash Flow

To improve cash flow, either increase income or decrease expenses. For most people, decreasing expenses is faster.

Fixed expenses (housing, utilities, insurance) are hardest to change but have the biggest impact. Reducing rent by $200/month saves $2,400/year. Reducing discretionary spending by $200/month also saves $2,400/year, but requires less structural change.

Positive cash flow is the prerequisite for every financial goal: saving, investing, debt payoff, retirement. Without it, you're stuck.

◆ Sources

  1. Cash Flow — Investopedia
  2. Investment Fundamentals — SEC
  3. Investor Protection — FINRA
  4. Investment Education — Investor.gov
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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