Randy Sadler is a risk management expert and serves as principal and CMO at CIC Services, a captive insurance management firm.
An unusually profitable year can create as much pressure as opportunity. Owners see stronger earnings. Shareholders see proof that leadership has the right path. Employees expect recognition. Lenders, boards and investors may start treating the new number as the company’s baseline.
Finance leaders often see a more complicated picture. A record year may reflect disciplined execution, stronger pricing or operational improvement, but it may also reflect timing, a one-time contract, a competitor’s misstep, delayed expenses or market conditions that may not repeat. That raises a strategic question beyond year-end reporting: How should a company use excess profit to reward success, protect liquidity, manage future expectations and prepare for risks that may not yet appear on the balance sheet?
Earlier in my career, I watched a large company respond to an unusually profitable year by funding an elaborate employee experience with resort accommodations, travel and entertainment. It was memorable, and it strengthened morale. Yet the decision also raised a question finance leaders should ask more often: When excess profit exists, could a portion of that capital do more than create a one-time experience? Could it strengthen the company’s ability to manage future volatility?
A record year can reset expectations.
Strong performance deserves recognition, but leadership should examine the source of the profit before deciding how to allocate it. If the company improved margins through lasting operational discipline, it may have earned a higher baseline. If profit rose because of a temporary demand spike, unusually low claims experience, a nonrecurring contract or delayed investment, leadership may carry an unrealistic benchmark into a less favorable year.
That benchmark can shape behavior quickly. Owners may expect larger distributions. Business unit leaders may build budgets around the higher number. Employees may view one-time rewards as the new norm. Boards may question margin compression the following year, even when the company remains healthy. The problem emerges when leaders allow a temporary spike to harden into a permanent expectation.
Excess profit should move through a capital allocation framework rather than a year-end spending exercise. Finance leaders need to weigh people, reinvestment, debt reduction, working capital, reserves and risk financing, while considering what each decision signals to stakeholders.
Forecasting should guide the decision.
Finance teams increasingly need to identify risks before those risks reach the income statement. Deloitte’s first-quarter 2026 CFO Signals survey found that 49% of respondents cited pressure to invest in new technologies as a driver of cost management, while 48% cited shrinking profit margins. That tension captures the challenge facing finance leaders: Companies need to fund future growth while protecting the current earnings base.
The same discipline shows up in other areas of finance. Experian has written about the need for credit portfolio management to move from “firefighting to forecasting,” using early signals, segmentation and scenario analysis to identify risk before losses emerge. Finance leaders can apply that mindset when deciding what to do with excess earnings, unusual liquidity or a one-time profit spike. Instead of treating a strong year as purely distributable income, use it to prepare for risks that may not show up until a future quarter or fiscal year.
A banner year gives leadership a rare advantage: Resources are available before the difficult year arrives. That timing allows the executive team to fund strategic priorities from a position of strength rather than searching for options during a downturn.
Build a capital allocation framework in four parts.
A strong year should prompt a deeper conversation than whether to increase bonuses, distributions or year-end purchases. Those decisions may have a place when employees helped create the result, but they should sit inside a broader framework that considers what the business may need over the next several years.
Leadership can start by separating uses of capital into four categories:
• Rewarding past performance: Bonuses, expanded benefits or employee experiences that recognize the people who helped create the result.
• Strengthening future performance: Technology, equipment, training, product development, marketing or process improvements that support future growth.
• Protecting the balance sheet: Debt reduction, stronger reserves or added working capital that give the business more flexibility.
• Managing retained risk: Insurance planning and other risk-financing strategies that address exposures the company may still retain.
That fourth category is where insurance planning becomes part of the broader capital conversation. Every company retains some exposure, even when it buys commercial insurance. Depending on the company’s size, risk profile and financial goals, the response may include stronger operating reserves, higher working capital targets, revised insurance limits, contractual risk transfer, contingency funds or alternative risk-financing structures.
One example in my area of expertise is a captive insurance company, which is a licensed insurance company formed to insure selected risks of its parent company or related businesses. For some companies, a captive can help fund risks the commercial market may not address efficiently and potentially retain underwriting profit when claims experience supports it, subject to regulatory, actuarial and operational requirements.
The larger point is that strong profits give finance leaders an opportunity to connect current-year performance with future resilience, rather than treating risk planning as separate from capital allocation.
Guardrails protect the strategy.
Any risk-financing strategy should start with a clear view of the company’s risk profile, profitability and long-term capital needs. Finance leaders should evaluate the risks the business already retains, where commercial coverage may leave gaps and how much capital may be needed to fund those exposures responsibly.
The right guardrails depend on the approach. Operating reserves require clear targets and discipline around when funds can be used. Higher insurance limits require careful review of cost, coverage terms and exclusions. Contractual risk transfer requires strong vendor, customer and indemnity language. More formal structures—including captives—require actuarial support, claims processes, governance, risk distribution and regulatory compliance.
That discipline gives the strategy its value. An exceptional year gives leadership more than a favorable report card; it creates a window to make decisions that may become harder to fund later. With the right framework, finance leaders can use strong performance to strengthen protection, preserve liquidity and support steadier performance through the next cycle.
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