[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
working capital adjustment

Working Capital Adjustment in Canadian Private M&A (2026): Peg, Cash‑like Items & Post‑closing True‑ups

By Global Law Experts
– posted 48 minutes ago

Introduction and Executive Summary

In every private M&A transaction structured on a cash‑free, debt‑free basis, the working capital adjustment is the mechanism that protects both buyer and seller from balance‑sheet surprises at closing. It compares the actual net working capital (NWC) delivered on the closing date against a pre‑agreed target, commonly called the “peg”, and adjusts the purchase price dollar‑for‑dollar to compensate for any shortfall or surplus. As Canadian deal activity regains momentum in 2026, with domestic transactions anchoring volume and deal teams prioritising certainty of execution, the drafting choices embedded in a working capital clause have moved to the forefront of purchase‑agreement negotiations.

This guide is written for M&A lawyers, corporate counsel, and the financial advisors who sit alongside them at the negotiating table. It provides the definitions, calculation methods, sample drafting language, and dispute‑avoidance checklists that practitioners need when structuring a net working capital adjustment for a Canadian private deal.

Key takeaways:

  • A working capital adjustment ensures enough operational liquidity remains in the business at close so the buyer does not need an immediate cash injection.
  • The peg is typically set using a trailing 12‑month average of NWC, normalised for one‑off items and seasonality.
  • Robust clause drafting, including clear definitions of cash‑like items, exclusions, and dispute‑resolution mechanics, is the single most effective way to prevent post‑closing disputes.
  • In 2026, inventory normalisation following multi‑year supply‑chain disruptions is shifting what constitutes a “normal” working capital baseline for many Canadian businesses.

Core Mechanics: How a Working Capital Adjustment Works

A working capital adjustment is a purchase price adjustment based on the difference between the target company’s actual net working capital at closing and a pre‑agreed working capital target. It is the most common form of price adjustment in private M&A transactions structured as cash‑free, debt‑free deals. The mechanism incentivises the seller to run the business normally through closing, without manipulating receivables, payables, or inventory to inflate the cash balance artificially, while giving the buyer confidence that the business will have sufficient short‑term liquidity on day one.

Net Working Capital Formula

Net Working Capital (NWC) is calculated as:

NWC = Current Assets − Current Liabilities

Current assets typically include accounts receivable, inventory, and prepaid expenses. Current liabilities typically include accounts payable, accrued expenses, and deferred revenue. The specific line items included or excluded are defined in the purchase agreement, and this definition is often the most heavily negotiated aspect of the entire working capital clause.

Peg / Target vs. Closing NWC: The Three‑Step Process

The working capital adjustment operates in three sequential steps:

  1. Agree the peg (pre‑closing). Buyer and seller negotiate a working capital target, the NWC amount the seller must deliver at closing so the business can function normally under new ownership.
  2. Calculate closing NWC (post‑closing). After the transaction closes, the buyer prepares a closing balance sheet and calculates actual NWC using the agreed definitions and accounting policies.
  3. Compute the adjustment. If actual closing NWC exceeds the peg, the buyer pays the seller the difference. If actual closing NWC falls below the peg, the seller reimburses the buyer, often from an escrow or holdback amount established at closing.

For example, if the parties agree on a working capital peg of CA$2,000,000 and the actual closing NWC is CA$1,850,000, the seller owes the buyer CA$150,000. Conversely, if closing NWC is CA$2,200,000, the buyer owes the seller an additional CA$200,000. This dollar‑for‑dollar true‑up is the standard approach in Canadian private M&A.

Setting the Working Capital Peg (Target NWC)

The peg is the agreed‑upon target NWC amount that the seller must deliver at closing. It is the single number around which the entire working capital adjustment revolves, and setting it correctly is essential to avoiding post‑closing disputes. Industry observers expect that in 2026, peg negotiations will require heightened attention to normalisation, particularly for businesses whose inventory levels shifted materially between 2022 and 2025 due to supply‑chain disruptions and subsequent normalisation.

Peg Calculation Methods

Method How It Works When to Use
Trailing 12‑month average Average monthly NWC over the 12 months preceding the letter of intent or closing date, adjusted for one‑time anomalies. Most common default; smooths seasonality and provides a representative baseline for stable businesses.
Trailing 6‑month average Average monthly NWC over the most recent 6 months, adjusted for anomalies. Useful when recent operating conditions differ materially from earlier periods, such as a business whose inventory has normalised in 2026 after years of elevated levels.
Month‑of‑close baseline NWC as of the most recent month‑end prior to close, with specified normalisation adjustments. Used for highly seasonal businesses where a trailing average would misrepresent the working capital needed at the specific time of year when the deal closes.

Buyer vs. seller incentives. The buyer generally wants a higher working capital peg, ensuring more operational liquidity remains in the business at close. The seller generally prefers a lower peg, which reduces the risk of a post‑closing payment to the buyer and may effectively increase net sale proceeds. Understanding these competing incentives is central to productive negotiation. In practice, the trailing 12‑month average offers a defensible, data‑driven starting point that both sides can adjust with specific normalisation items supported by evidence from the target’s books.

When normalising the peg, parties should strip out one‑off items such as litigation settlements, insurance recoveries, related‑party transactions settled at non‑arm’s‑length terms, and any unusual inventory build‑up or draw‑down. For 2026 transactions, the likely practical effect of multi‑year inventory normalisation is that trailing 12‑month averages may still contain months of elevated or depleted inventory, requiring careful month‑by‑month analysis rather than a simple average.

Cash‑Like Items, Exclusions, and Normalisation

One of the most consequential drafting decisions in any working capital adjustment clause is which line items count as “current assets” and “current liabilities”, and which are excluded as cash‑like items, debt‑like items, or one‑off anomalies. Getting this wrong can shift millions of dollars from one side to the other.

Common Cash‑Like Inclusions

Cash‑like items are assets that behave economically like cash and are typically excluded from the NWC definition in a cash‑free, debt‑free deal because they are already accounted for separately in the enterprise‑value‑to‑equity bridge. Common examples include:

  • Cash and cash equivalents. Bank balances, petty cash, and overnight deposits.
  • Restricted cash. Deposits held as security for leases, performance bonds, or letters of credit.
  • Short‑term marketable securities. Treasury bills, money‑market instruments, and other highly liquid investments with maturities under 90 days.
  • Excess deposits. Amounts held in trust or escrow for the benefit of the target that are expected to be released.

Drafting note: Always list cash‑like items explicitly in a schedule to the purchase agreement. Relying on a generic reference to “cash and cash equivalents as defined under IFRS” or “ASPE” creates unnecessary ambiguity because accounting standards allow judgment in classification.

Typical Exclusions and Why They Matter

  • Income tax receivables and payables. Often excluded because they relate to periods before the buyer assumes risk.
  • Deferred revenue (long‑term portion). Excluded if it does not represent a near‑term working capital obligation.
  • Related‑party receivables and payables. Excluded to prevent manipulation and to reflect arm’s‑length operations post‑close.
  • One‑off accruals. Litigation reserves, restructuring charges, and similar items that do not reflect normal‑course operations.
  • Debt‑like items. Deferred purchase consideration, capital lease obligations (current portion), and accrued interest, treated as debt, not working capital.

A well‑drafted normalised working capital definition uses both a positive list (items included) and a negative list (items excluded), accompanied by a sample calculation based on a recent historical balance sheet so that both parties can see exactly how the definition applies.

Drafting the Working Capital Adjustment Clause: Sample Language and Schedules

The purchase price adjustment clause is the operational heart of the working capital mechanism. Poorly drafted language is the leading cause of post‑closing disputes. The following model clause blocks reflect standard Canadian private M&A practice and can be adapted for specific transactions.

Model Clause, Definition of Net Working Capital (for discussion):

“Net Working Capital” means, as at the Effective Time, (a) the aggregate of those categories of current assets of the Corporation set out in Column A of Schedule 2.5, calculated in accordance with IFRS applied using the same accounting policies, practices, procedures, and methods (including with respect to the exercise of accounting judgment and the making of estimates) as were used in the preparation of the Reference Balance Sheet, less (b) the aggregate of those categories of current liabilities of the Corporation set out in Column B of Schedule 2.5, calculated on the same basis, in each case excluding the items listed in Column C of Schedule 2.5.

Model Clause, Calculation Mechanics and Rounding (for discussion):

All amounts in the Closing Statement shall be rounded to the nearest whole dollar. To the extent a line item is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation under IFRS, the interpretation most consistent with the methodology applied in calculating the Target Net Working Capital shall govern.

Model Clause, Timing and Dispute Window (for discussion):

Within sixty (60) Business Days following the Closing Date, the Purchaser shall deliver to the Vendor a statement (the “Closing Statement”) setting out the Purchaser’s calculation of Closing Net Working Capital. The Vendor shall have thirty (30) Business Days following receipt of the Closing Statement to deliver a written notice of objection (the “Objection Notice”) specifying each item in dispute and the Vendor’s proposed alternative amount. If the Vendor does not deliver an Objection Notice within such period, the Closing Statement shall be final and binding.

Schedule 2.5, Sample NWC Line Item Structure:

Column A, Current Assets (Included) Column B, Current Liabilities (Included) Column C, Excluded Items
Accounts receivable (trade) Accounts payable (trade) Cash and cash equivalents
Inventory Accrued wages and benefits Income tax receivables / payables
Prepaid expenses Accrued operating expenses Related‑party receivables / payables
HST / GST receivable Deferred revenue (current portion) Current portion of long‑term debt
Other current assets (specified) Customer deposits Restricted cash, marketable securities

Including a sample calculation based on the Reference Balance Sheet (typically the most recent audited or reviewed balance sheet) directly in the schedule eliminates a substantial share of interpretation disputes by showing the parties, and any future independent expert, exactly how the definition was intended to operate.

Post‑Closing True‑Up Process and Dispute Resolution

The post‑closing true‑up is the procedure by which the parties finalise the net working capital adjustment and exchange any resulting payment. A well‑structured true‑up process follows a predictable timeline, grants both sides adequate review rights, and provides a clear escalation path for disputes.

Timeline of Steps

  1. Closing Date: Transaction closes. An estimated closing balance sheet adjustment is made based on a pre‑closing estimate of NWC, often prepared two to five business days before close. The estimated shortfall or surplus is reflected in the closing payment or funded into escrow.
  2. Closing Statement (Day 1–60 post‑close): The buyer prepares and delivers a detailed closing statement calculating actual NWC as of the closing date, using the agreed definitions and accounting policies.
  3. Vendor Review Period (Day 60–90): The seller (and its advisors) review the closing statement. The buyer must provide reasonable access to the target’s books, records, and personnel to facilitate the review.
  4. Objection Notice (Day 90 or agreed deadline): If the seller disagrees, it delivers a written objection specifying each disputed item and its proposed alternative amount.
  5. Negotiation Period (Day 90–120): The parties negotiate in good faith to resolve disputed items.
  6. Independent Expert Determination (Day 120+): Unresolved items are referred to an independent accounting firm, typically a “Big Four” or national firm not previously engaged by either party, whose determination is final and binding, absent manifest error.
  7. Adjustment Payment and Escrow Release: Once the closing statement is finalised, the net adjustment amount is paid within five to ten business days. Any remaining balance in the working capital escrow is released to the seller.

Dispute Mechanisms: Drafting Considerations

The choice of dispute mechanism significantly affects cost, speed, and finality. Three common approaches are used in Canadian private M&A:

  • Independent accounting expert. The most prevalent mechanism. The expert acts as an expert, not an arbitrator, and is typically restricted to selecting, for each disputed item, the buyer’s position, the seller’s position, or any amount between them. This “baseball arbitration” constraint encourages reasonable opening positions.
  • Full arbitration. Less common for pure accounting disputes, but occasionally used when the dispute involves interpretive questions about accounting policy or IFRS application that go beyond number‑crunching.
  • Escalation clause. Requires the parties’ respective CFOs or senior financial officers to meet within a specified period before any referral to an independent expert, a low‑cost filter that resolves many minor disagreements.

Escrow vs. holdback. In a typical Canadian deal, the buyer withholds a portion of the purchase price, often between 5% and 15% of estimated NWC, in escrow pending the post‑closing true‑up. An alternative structure uses a holdback (a deferred portion of the purchase price retained by the buyer rather than deposited with a third‑party escrow agent). Industry observers note that the escrow approach provides greater certainty to sellers because the funds are held independently, while holdbacks give the buyer more control but may concern sellers about credit risk.

Worked Example: Purchase Price Adjustment Calculation

The following numeric example illustrates how a working capital adjustment operates in practice.

Item Amount (CA$)
Enterprise value (agreed) 20,000,000
Working capital peg (Target NWC) 2,000,000
Estimated closing NWC (pre‑closing) 1,950,000
Closing payment = EV − estimated shortfall 19,950,000
Actual closing NWC (per closing statement) 1,820,000
Adjustment = Actual NWC − Peg (180,000)
Amount already reflected in closing payment (50,000)
Additional payment from seller to buyer 130,000

In this example, the seller’s actual closing NWC fell CA$180,000 below the peg. Because CA$50,000 of that shortfall was already reflected in the estimated closing payment, the seller owes the buyer an additional CA$130,000, which is drawn from the escrow. If the closing statement had shown actual NWC of CA$2,150,000, the buyer would owe the seller CA$150,000 above the peg (less the CA$50,000 already withheld), resulting in a net payment of CA$200,000 to the seller.

Avoiding Disputes: Best Practices Checklist for Buyers and Sellers

The following checklist, drawn from standard Canadian deal practice, addresses the most frequent sources of working capital adjustment disputes:

  • Define every line item explicitly. Use a schedule with positive and negative lists, never rely on a generic “IFRS current assets” reference alone.
  • Attach a sample calculation. Include a worked example on the Reference Balance Sheet so the methodology is demonstrated, not merely described.
  • Lock accounting policies. Specify that the closing statement must follow the same accounting policies, practices, and estimation methods used in the Reference Balance Sheet, not the buyer’s post‑acquisition policies.
  • Require accountants’ sign‑off. Have each party’s financial advisors confirm the peg calculation and NWC definition before signing.
  • Guarantee data access. Include a covenant requiring the buyer to provide the seller full access to books, records, and personnel during the review window.
  • Include interim operating covenants. Require the seller to operate in the ordinary course between signing and closing, preventing deliberate acceleration of collections or deferral of payables.
  • Set a materiality threshold or collar. Consider a de minimis threshold (e.g., CA$25,000) below which no adjustment is made, to eliminate nuisance disputes.
  • Design the escrow carefully. Size the escrow to cover the reasonably expected range of adjustment, typically 100%–150% of the estimated maximum downward adjustment.
  • Pre‑agree the independent expert. Name the independent accounting firm (or a selection mechanism) in the purchase agreement to avoid a secondary negotiation if a dispute arises.
  • Document normalisation adjustments. If seasonal, one‑off, or inventory‑related normalisation adjustments were applied to calculate the peg, record the rationale in a schedule so the same logic applies when interpreting the closing statement.

Comparison Table: Working Capital Adjustment Methods and Implications

Canadian private M&A transactions predominantly use one of three adjustment methodologies. The following table summarises each approach and its practical implications for buyers and sellers.

Adjustment Method Typical Use Case Buyer / Seller Impact
Dollar‑for‑dollar peg true‑up (post‑closing statement) Standard private M&A; cash‑free / debt‑free deals Neutral if peg is well set; buyer is protected against NWC shortfalls; seller retains upside if NWC exceeds peg
Locked‑box (no post‑closing true‑up) Competitive auction processes; seller wants price certainty at signing; common in European‑influenced deals Favours seller (no post‑closing clawback); buyer demands warranties, leakage covenants, and interest on the locked‑box balance
Hybrid (minimum peg + dollar‑for‑dollar above/below a collar) Highly seasonal businesses or where significant NWC volatility exists Balances incentives; reduces low‑value disputes; collar absorbs minor fluctuations while providing protection at the extremes

Early indications suggest that the dollar‑for‑dollar peg true‑up remains the dominant structure in Canadian private M&A in 2026, though locked‑box mechanics are appearing more frequently in transactions involving cross‑border buyers accustomed to European deal structures.

Canada‑Specific Considerations and Regulatory Context (2026)

The Canadian M&A environment in 2026 prioritises certainty of execution. Domestic transactions continue to anchor deal volume, while foreign acquirers face heightened scrutiny under the Investment Canada Act and a revamped Competition Act. While these regulatory frameworks do not directly govern working capital adjustment mechanics, they have an indirect effect on deal structuring: transactions with longer regulatory approval timelines create a wider gap between signing and closing, which increases the period during which NWC can fluctuate.

Practitioners structuring a working capital adjustment for a Canadian deal in 2026 should consider:

  • Extended interim periods. If regulatory approval timelines stretch beyond 60–90 days, strengthen interim operating covenants and consider a pre‑closing NWC estimate refresh mechanism.
  • Inventory normalisation. Many Canadian businesses are completing a multi‑year cycle of supply‑chain adjustment. Trailing 12‑month averages may still include months of atypical inventory levels, making month‑by‑month normalisation analysis critical.
  • Accounting standards. Canadian private companies may report under ASPE or IFRS. The working capital clause must specify which standard governs the closing statement calculation, and whether any IFRS‑to‑ASPE (or vice versa) conversion is required.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ghazal Hamedani​ at Kalfa Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Practical Law (Thomson Reuters), Working Capital Adjustment (Canada)
  2. Stikeman Elliott, Working Capital Adjustments: Ensuring That the Price Is Really Right
  3. Valutico, Working Capital Adjustment in M&A: A Definitive Guide
  4. SRS Acquiom, Net Working Capital / Purchase Price Adjustment Insights
  5. Kroll, Navigating Working Capital in M&A Transactions
  6. PwC, 2026 Canadian M&A Outlook / Deals Trends
  7. Schneider Downs, Understanding the Net Working Capital Peg in M&A Transactions
  8. Breaking Into Wall Street, The Working Capital Adjustment in LBOs and M&A

FAQs

What is a working capital adjustment in M&A?
A working capital adjustment is a purchase price adjustment mechanism used in private M&A transactions. It compares the business’s actual net working capital at closing against a pre‑agreed target (the “peg”) and adjusts the purchase price dollar‑for‑dollar for any shortfall or surplus, ensuring the buyer receives a business with adequate short‑term liquidity.
Net working capital equals current assets minus current liabilities, using the specific line‑item definitions agreed in the purchase agreement. The formula is: NWC = Accounts Receivable + Inventory + Prepaid Expenses + Other Included Current Assets − Accounts Payable − Accrued Liabilities − Other Included Current Liabilities. Items such as cash, debt, and tax balances are typically excluded.
The buyer generally wants a higher NWC peg. A higher target means more operational liquidity must be left in the business at closing. If actual NWC falls below a higher peg, the seller must make a larger payment to the buyer. Sellers, conversely, prefer a lower peg to minimise the risk of a post‑closing adjustment payment.
Cash‑like items typically include bank balances, petty cash, restricted cash (such as lease deposits), short‑term marketable securities, and money‑market instruments. These items are excluded from the NWC definition in a cash‑free, debt‑free deal because they are accounted for separately in the enterprise‑value‑to‑equity bridge.
The typical post‑closing true‑up timeline ranges from 90 to 120 days in total: 60 days for the buyer to prepare the closing statement, 30 days for the seller to review and object, and an additional negotiation or independent expert period if disputes arise. Simpler transactions may complete the process in as few as 60 days.
The most common mechanism is referral to an independent accounting expert, typically a major national or international accounting firm, whose determination is final and binding. The expert is usually limited to selecting, for each disputed line item, an amount between the buyer’s and the seller’s positions. Some agreements also include a mandatory escalation step requiring senior financial officers to negotiate before expert referral.
Seasonal businesses may experience material NWC fluctuations throughout the year. If the peg is set using a simple trailing average, it may not reflect the NWC the business actually needs at the time of closing. In 2026, many Canadian businesses are completing a cycle of inventory normalisation that began during the supply‑chain disruptions of 2022–2024. Industry observers expect that deal teams will increasingly perform month‑by‑month normalisation analysis rather than relying on unmodified trailing averages, to ensure the peg accurately reflects current operating conditions.
do grandparents have rights
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

ai copyright line between training theft
By Global Law Experts

posted 3 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Working Capital Adjustment in Canadian Private M&A (2026): Peg, Cash‑like Items & Post‑closing True‑ups

Send welcome message

Custom Message