Net Burn Rate (often just called 'burn rate') is the speed at which a company is losing money. Imagine a startup founder with a pile of cash—the burn rate measures how quickly that pile is shrinking. It’s the net amount of cash a company spends per month to keep the lights on, over and above any cash it’s bringing in from customers. This metric is a vital health check for young, unprofitable companies, especially in the tech and biotech sectors, which often spend heavily on growth and development long before they see a profit. For an investor, the Net Burn Rate is a countdown clock. It tells you how much time, or Financial Runway, the company has before it either needs to start making money, find more investors, or shut down. It’s a stark, simple measure of a company’s financial sustainability in its current state.
At first glance, a money-losing company might seem like the opposite of a value investing target. Legendary investors like Benjamin Graham preached the gospel of profitable, stable enterprises. However, the modern investment landscape includes promising companies that are temporarily unprofitable by design. They might be disrupting an entire industry or investing all their capital into creating a powerful economic moat. For a value investor, the Net Burn Rate is a critical tool for risk assessment in these situations. It helps answer the key question: How long can this company survive on its current resources? This is, in essence, a form of Margin of Safety measured in time instead of price. A company with a low burn rate and a mountain of cash has the luxury of time to execute its strategy, weather economic storms, or outlast competitors. Conversely, a company with a high burn rate and a dwindling cash reserve is a high-stakes gamble. Understanding the burn rate allows you to distinguish between a company making smart, temporary investments in its future and one that is simply burning through cash irresponsibly.
While there are complex ways to calculate it, the spirit of the Net Burn Rate is about simplicity. You want to know how much cash the company is actually losing from its bank account each month.
The most straightforward way to estimate the Net Burn Rate is by looking at the change in a company's cash position over a period (like a quarter or a year). You can find the necessary figures on the company's Cash Flow Statement. Net Burn Rate = (Cash Flow from Operations + Cash Flow from Investing) Let's break that down:
We generally ignore Cash Flow from Financing because it includes activities like raising money from investors or taking on debt, which would mask the true operational cash burn.
You might also hear the term Gross Burn Rate. The difference is simple:
The real power of the Net Burn Rate comes when you use it to calculate the company's Financial Runway.
The runway is how many months the company can survive before it runs out of money, assuming its income and expenses remain constant. It's the ultimate survival metric. Runway (in months) = Total Cash and Cash Equivalents / Monthly Net Burn Rate
Let's say you're analyzing “Future Motors,” a new electric vehicle startup.
Conclusion: Future Motors has a 20-month runway. This gives them over a year and a half to ramp up production, increase sales to reach breakeven, or secure another round of funding. For an investor, this might be a reasonable amount of time, reducing the immediate risk of bankruptcy.
The Net Burn Rate isn't just a number; it's a story about a company's discipline and strategy.