The filing had to be made by: 30-01-2025
The annual accounts must be filed within 30 days after they have been approved by the general at the meeting and no later than 7 months after the closing date of the financial year, are deposited with the Central Balance Sheet Office.
Companies that do not submit their annual accounts on time will be charged a rate surcharge.
From the first day of the 9th month after the closing of the financial year:
- 120 euros for small companies (= abbreviated scheme)
- 400 euros for the other companies
The reason may be of an organizational or administrative nature.
If the company has other negative signals, this may indicate a serious negative signal.
Companies in difficulty often withhold their annual accounts because they wish to hide their bad figures.
If a business's customer credit levels are falling, that could be a sign it is not selling so much (so has less receivables) or has tightened up its payment policy because it is short of liquidity.
Most businesses which fail have very low customer credit levels.
If a business's supplier credit levels are rising continuously, that may indicate it cannot pay its suppliers on time and hence is fighting liquidity problems.
NB: with a healthy business, this may be due to a conscious or new payment policy
Setting your customers shorter credit terms means they have to pay sooner.
The longer your payment terms, the more uncertain you are that you will be paid what you are owed.
(= more risk)
If a supplier allows a customer more time to pay, that may mean they have great confidence in them.
Customer credit = cost
Supplier credit = income