Stacking the Pennies Perfectly, Avoiding These Common Pitfalls
I often talk with customers that are dealing with the
headaches of trying to account for thousands of loans, often with a team of
people each having different responsibilities, and quite a bit of confusion can
arise when trying to implement and operate a new system to do the complex
accounting demanded by loans. I’ve
summed up some of the pitfalls I’ve seen people fall into time and again, along
with the path you should walk to avoid endless confusion and accounting
headaches.
Problem: Not relying on the accuracy and accountability of Moneylender’s systems.
You start using Moneylender, but you don’t trust that
Moneylender is doing what you want.
Perhaps you were managing your loans in Excel and input every number by
hand. Losing that familiarity with every single penny feels wrong, like your
loans are out of control.
Perhaps you have a strong accounting background, and you want
to apply the principals of standard business bookkeeping to the loans as an
aggregate and each loan individually.
You expect that the money should all present itself in an orderly, linear fashion on both
the loan’s calculations and the bank account.
Solution: Review Moneylender’s transactions in detail so you can be entirely confident in the correctness of the numbers.
In the first example, losing control feels bad. By checking Moneylender as you might check your
hand-calculated values, you can be absolutely certain that the numbers are
perfect to the penny. If the numbers
aren’t perfect, you can be sure there’s a setting somewhere that might need
some slight adjustment. Use the Ledger
Transactions report that comes with Moneylender to check the individual transactions
across the accounts on a single loan.
You can quickly see exactly how much is being charged and applied from
the very start of the loan to today (and a little beyond that, even).
In the second example, the way loans function does not
conform directly to normal bookkeeping. An
exceedingly common example: a payment arrives at the end of the month, but
since you earn interest on a loan monthly the payment is applied to the loan on
the first of the next month, after the interest has been earned. This is exactly what you would expect to
happen. You balance your bank account
and attempt to match the principal and interest received on each payment to the
balances of the accounts. You compare
the payments to the balances at the end of the month, but because the payments
don’t affect the balances until the first of the following month in Moneylender,
the funds seem to mysteriously vanish from some reports, and are overstated on
others.
Reviewing the individual transactions on each loan so that
you are comfortable with how payments are received and applied will help you
get comfortable with the different numbers that appear in Moneylender. If you can be certain the pennies on every
loan are perfect, then you can be certain that the numbers on the reports
overall will perfectly account for all the money. When you are confident that Moneylender is
tracking the pennies perfectly on each loan, you will be able to let go of the
notion that balancing the bank account and balancing the loans are the same task
with the same numbers. It is OK that the
total balance outstanding is different in your bookkeeping when compared to
Moneylender’s balances at any given instance in time.
Problem: Wanting the accounting system to know everything Moneylender knows.
You may have been doing the books for a long time, and you know
your numbers. Suddenly Moneylender is
thrown in the mix and now you have all these individual accounts. You want your bookkeeping software to
continue to be the authority of all your money, so you try to find an easy way
to get each individual loan’s details from Moneylender into your books. The numbers just don’t fit right, nothing
adds up, and you wonder what the heck Moneylender is even doing to come up with
these seemingly random numbers on its reports.
Solution: Let Moneylender be your bookkeeping for individual loans.
Resist the temptation to use your bookkeeping software to do
something it is not built to do. In Moneylender
each loan is actually a collection of seven separate accounts being tracked
simultaneously. These accounts work in
concert to determine all the various figures needed to manage and balance the
loan. You can’t draw a seven-dimensional
object on a sheet of paper. You can’t
take seven accounts and consolidate the activity into a single account and retain the
entirety of the details. Moneylender’s systems
will do the hard work for you, and they provide you with a crystal-clear audit
system to review each account independently – the Ledger Transactions report. Your bookkeeping software needs to know about
anything that touches the bank: principal and escrow disbursals out of your account,
and payments received, for example. You
can enter the aggregate interest, fees, and escrow from the payments received
into your bookkeeping for profits and escrow information, but avoid getting more
detailed than that.
You bought Moneylender to make your life easier. You are used to digging dirt, and have become
quite handy with a shovel. Now find you
have to break up some large stones, so you buy a pickaxe. You don’t try to use the shovel to do the job
of the pickaxe. The pickaxe handles
breaking up the stones, and the shovel removes the gravel. Let Moneylender and your bookkeeping software
do their respective jobs. The overlap is
probably quite a bit narrower than you expect it to be.
Problem: Over-using one part of the program because it’s familiar.
You have been entering payments on your loans for a while,
and you’re really comfortable choosing the right settings on Moneylender’s
payments tab. You run the regular
statement like a pro, and you can kick out a payment distribution report, no
problem. An unusual situation pops up and you try to figure out how to make the numbers you want show up in the
places you are familiar with using the tool the same way you usually do. Like trying to use the turn signal in a
car instead of the hazard lights. Both switches make the blinkers blink, but the different pattern stems from totally different situations. The
tool seems related to what you know, but how you activate it is positioned in
an unfamiliar place. The most common symptom
of this problem is that you start using negative payments to make a number change on a report.
Solution: Explore and experiment boldly with the less familiar. Make a portfolio backup or export the loan as a safety net.
If you’re afraid you’ll break something, you can click File >
Backup Portfolio to make yourself a copy of the portfolio in case you really do
manage to cause total carnage. Alternately,
select the loan and click Tools > Export Selected > type a new name for a
portfolio in the window that pops up, and now you have a copy of the loan in an
isolated portfolio where you can poke and prod without fear of harming your main portfolio.
Just as you did some work to learn the parts of the program
that have become routine, it’s time once again to get out of your comfort zone
and learn some more about what Moneylender can do. With something like 100,000 loans in
Moneylender worldwide, it’s unlikely that you’re bumping into a situation that
hasn’t ever happened before.
Look in the table of contents of the User’s Guide for
topics that are related to what you’re doing.
That is a great way to expand your understanding of how all the pieces
of Moneylender can help you solve your situation – adding to the handful of
pieces you already know really well. You’re
really good with zip-ties, but think about being great with zip-ties AND paper
clips. So many new possibilities!
I know it’s an hour of your life that you’ll never get back,
but watch this video on all the loan settings in Moneylender. Seeing what each thing does, and how it
affects the transactions on a loan will take you a long way toward knowing what’s
possible and knowing where to look for more information.
Don’t be afraid to push the (?) buttons on the various
windows in Moneylender. It’ll take you
to the exact spot in the user’s guide where you’ll get details on how to use
the thing you’re looking at. It opens a
browser window, so it has no effect on Moneylender or your records at all.
Problem: Trying to make the real-world loan match the paperwork at origination.
You just originated a loan, and the borrower paid their
first three payments on time. Everything
looks beautiful. The Payment Distribution
report looks just like the beginning of the amortization table. The sun is shining and the birds are
singing. Then the borrower misses a
month and then makes a regular payment, or rounds up their payment to the
nearest multiple of 10, or pays an extra $500.
The Payment Distribution breaks away from the Amortization Schedule.
A similar manifestation of this problem is when you’re setting
up the loan and Moneylender’s suggested payments don’t match what you have on
your paperwork. You fiddle with the
various dates and rates and settings in the loan wizard, but the suggest
payments just never quite line up.
Solution: Throw out the idea that correctly accounting for a loan means it has to follow some prescribed path.
I know of but few instances where a loan was repaid exactly in
accordance with the amortization schedule.
Fewer still are the lenders that held themselves to the rule that you can
foreclose after three months of nonpayment.
The proper and accurate accounting of a loan comes from the correct
calculation of interest, adding fees in accordance with the terms of the
contract, and applying the payments at the correct times to the correct amounts.
Your loan WILL DEVIATE from the amortization schedule. This is normal. Moneylender’s payment suggestions might
differ a little from the method used to come up with the loan contract. This is also perfectly normal. Just enter the payment amount from the
contract, regardless of the suggested numbers.
If the suggestions are extremely different for no discernible reason,
there’s probably a setting somewhere that is way off. If it’s a few cents or a few dollars, don’t
worry about it.
You use the settings on a loan to tell Moneylender the rules
of the contract. Moneylender will then
do all its fancy footwork to follow those rules for you. The systems are built around two ideas: you are
going to collect the fees and interest that you are entitled to collect in
accordance with the contract; wherever there is the possibility of two methods
of applying funds, they will always be applied in the way that follows the
rules to the benefit of the borrower. If
the records are set up correctly, you’ll never have to worry about the program
taking money from the borrower that you are later forced to give back. You’ll also get your late fees and interest in
accordance with the contract – you deserve to be collecting what the borrower
agreed to pay, and Moneylender will do that for you.
The settings define the rules, and the borrower’s
performance on the contract defines the balance. The balance is largely out
of your hands once the borrower starts repaying the loan. The interest isn’t going to follow the
amortization schedule if the borrower’s payments don’t follow it. That is normal and correct. If you are concerned about a deviation from
the amortization schedule – look at the amounts and timing of the
payments. If those differ from the
amortization schedule even a little, you can forget ever referring to that
schedule again, it’s moot.
You can, of course, manually change any balance in
Moneylender at any time using Adjustment settings, but you don’t want to use
adjustments to “correct” an interest calculation. Adjustments should be reserved for actual
deviations from the contracted terms – for example, you elect to waive a late fee. Here you are manually overriding
the terms of the contract to forgive the fee, and in Moneylender this takes the
form of a Fee Adjustment in the opposite amount of the late fee being
waived. If you edit the interest, you’ll
end up doing it forever, and that is not why you bought Moneylender. There’s a good chance there is a checkbox or
other setting that just needs to be changed to make the program do the math
slightly differently.
By the same token, Moneylender’s payment suggestions are not
as robust as the calculator itself, nor does the calculator care in the least
about the math the payment suggestions are using to come up with their
numbers. Once you tell Moneylender how
much to expect from the borrower each month, Moneylender happily follows that
rule.
Problem: Trying to get every number from a single report.
Each report shows a specific view into the numbers. If a report shows you the face of a seven-dimensional
object from one perspective, you’re going to need several reports to really see
a clear picture of the loans. Line up
several loans side by side, and you’ll need many vantage points to truly
illuminate the situation.
Solution: Learn the utility of each report in Moneylender, and create your own reports to give you exactly the perspective that matches how you operate.
The Payment Distribution is the go-to report for showing how
your borrower’s payments have been applied to the loan. It does not show non-payment transactions at
all. Don’t try to make non-payment
transactions appear on this report.
The Ledger Transactions report shows the individual
transactions and resulting balance in any one of the seven accounts on the loan
at all times over the life of the loan.
You can choose the account to show from the Account dropdown at the top
of the window. To see each transaction
on the loan, the Ledger account is your overall balance. If a borrower wants to see something on their
loan balance, give them the ledger for some reasonable period of time. To see the fluctuations of their escrow account
over time, run the Ledger Transactions report on the Escrow account. To see if they were paid current, ahead, or
behind, run the Ledger Transactions for the AmountDue account.
To determine your money in and out (principal you gave to
borrowers and payment you received) use the Cash Flow report. To see how much principal was loaned and
received, interest was earned and paid, fees were charged and collected within
a date range, use the Financial Activity report.
To get a list of the individual payments received with a
date range use the Payment Reconciliation report. This report is especially helpful for
reconciling your records in Moneylender to your bank account, whether directly against
the bank records or through bookkeeping software as an intermediate step.
Add columns to reports when you just want a little extra
information that’s related to the rest of the data on the report. If you want some numbers for a certain period
of time, and it’s not closely related to the information on a different report,
create a brand-new report. It’s ok to
run several reports. It’s not too
painful, even with 10,000 loans, to let the report compile the numbers for a
bit. You can load multiple reports
concurrently if you want. Often, stuffing
all the columns on one report will take longer to load than the combined load
times of two reports where the same data is logically separated. The report engine will try to load only the data required to compute the values for the columns of the report.
If you took the Payment Reconciliation report and added the
principal balance to it, and put a sum on the new column, the total of all principal balances is an unreliable and incorrect number. Since Payment
reconciliation lists each payment on its own line, and the principal balance is
the principal after each payment was applied, and you might get two payments from
the same loan within the report date range, you’d have two principal balance
numbers from the same loan getting added into the sum at the bottom of the
report. Making a separate report explicitly
to list the principal balances of the loans in your portfolio ensures you don’t
inadvertently start doing your books against a set of numbers that are
functionally erroneous. This can be
especially tricky when you have months where only one payment arrives for each
loan, making the number appear to be reliably correct, and then to have that
number kick out something wrong later when you get double or zero payments on a loan.
Problem: Wanting to track all the individual loans in the accounting software.
Your accounting software is the master of your
finances. It needs to know everything
about the flow of funds through your business.
Moneylender is a calculator that helps figure out balances, but the valuation
of assets and final authority of all your business holdings must rest within your
bookkeeping system.
Solution: Treat Moneylender as the absolute authority of the value of your loans.
You have a shovel and a pick now. You don’t want to break rocks with the pick
until you figure out how to break rocks with the shovel. Bookkeeping software is not built to account
for loans with any degree of convenience.
Moneylender is not built to do your company’s books, either. They are two very different tasks. You have invested $500, or $1000, or maybe
even $5000, to outfit the people in your organization with Moneylender. It is a powerful system, built to do the
accounting for your loans. Honor your
investment in this system by shifting the responsibility for the loans into
Moneylender. Don’t worry, it can handle
the pressure. There are tens or possibly hundreds of billions of dollars being serviced in Moneylender, and other
currencies, too. Moneylender is in use
all around the world, in every conceivable configuration, to handle the
requirements of businesses of all sizes, from the accidental lender with one
loan for $3,000 to the national lender with thousands of loans across all sorts
of regulatory boundaries.
Lean on Moneylender. Let it do its work for you. If you get stuck, we’re here to help. You made the right choice investing in
Moneylender with both your money and your time.
Problem: Wanting to reconcile loan balances against the bank account from month to month.
You can reconcile your payment entries and the principal
paid out to the bank. Moneylender shows
you how much you paid out, and how much principal was paid back in. Yet, when you try to get these numbers to add
up at month end, Moneylender’s reports are frustratingly misaligned with each
other. How could anyone trust a system
like this?
Solution: Don’t worry about matching up balances for specific date ranges when you’re working in terms of payments received.
Everything in loans has two dates – the date you got the
money, and the date the money actually affects the loan balance. It is almost more common than not that you’ll
receive money one month, but it’ll show up on the next month’s reports. Just make sure you haven’t misapplied any
payments, everything made it into the bank ok, and you can double-check that
your disbursals have properly paid out of your bank across your loans. Beyond that, your bank doesn’t know enough to
help inform you of your loan balances. But
Moneylender DOES have the knowledge. Moneylender
can tell you exactly what the principal balance is at all points in time on any
loan and you can review every single transaction Moneylender generates for accuracy
and applicability. At the end of a loan,
when it is closed and the balance is zero, then you can be certain that the
total principal you’ve paid out in disbursements on the loan will exactly equal
the total principal received from payments on the loan (plus whatever amount
you might have had to charge off). The
month-to-month boundaries are not as important.
Use the total interest received for the year from the Payment
Reconciliation report if you want a cash accounting style of your interest
income. Use the total interest paid on
the Financial Activity report if you want more of an accrual style
accounting. In the end, neither one is
particularly more correct than the other, so pick the one you like the most and
stick to it. Moneylender can give you
the numbers and you can feed it into your books every week or month or year.
I hope this hasn’t come across as a lecture. My eight-year-old son knows how much I love
to pontificate on the minutia of technicalities. Some of the greatest despair I hear on phone
calls with customers is when they’re trying to appease a bookkeeper or an
accounting team that wants their bookkeeping software to understand loans the
way Moneylender does. And it’s a hard
pitch to sell that some of the bookkeeping and accounting is going to have to
be done outside the familiar systems. At
the very least, Moneylender is going to need to be responsible for the
balances and amounts due on all the loans.
Any attempt to transcribe that balance and receivables data out of the system
is likely to create confusion, double-entry, and long-term problems. A couple
hours tinkering in Moneylender’s reports might be all it takes for a CFO to
trust that Moneylender can break up the boulders into easily shoveled gravel.
If you aren’t already using Moneylender, you should get yourself a copy and simplify the management and servicing of your loans. We pride ourselves on
making some truly outstanding loan servicing software. We want everyone to have access to it as a
tool to gain greater profit, efficiency and accuracy. Thanks for reading all this way.
Tell us your stories about working over your books with
loans in the comments!
1 Comments:
I had the good fortune that my friend paid extra on his loan every month, and paid it off several payments early. Moneylender, of course, handled the overpayment without skipping a beat. Even back in the era of Moneylender v2!
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home