Portfolio Monitoring
description: Track and analyze portfolio company performance against
plan. Ingests monthly/quarterly financial packages (Excel, PDF),
extracts KPIs, flags variances to budget, and produces summary
dashboards. Use when reviewing portfolio company financials, preparing
board materials, or monitoring covenant compliance. Triggers on "review
portfolio company", "monthly financials", "how is [company] performing",
"covenant check", or "portfolio update".
Workflow
Step 1: Ingest Financial
Package
- Accept the user's portfolio company financial package (Excel
workbook, PDF, or CSV)
- Extract key financials: Revenue, EBITDA, cash balance, debt
outstanding, capex, working capital
- Identify the reporting period and compare to prior period and
budget/plan
Key metrics to track (adapt to the company's sector):
Financial KPIs:
- Revenue vs. budget ($ and %)
- EBITDA and EBITDA margin vs. budget
- Cash balance and net debt
- Leverage ratio (Net Debt / LTM EBITDA)
- Interest coverage ratio
- Capex vs. budget
- Free cash flow
Operational KPIs (ask user or infer from data):
- Customer count / revenue per customer
- Employee headcount / revenue per employee
- Backlog / pipeline
- Churn / retention rates
Step 3: Flag & Summarize
- Green: Within 5% of plan
- Yellow: 5-15% below plan — flag for discussion
- Red: >15% below plan or covenant breach risk —
immediate attention
Output a concise summary:
- One-paragraph executive summary ("Company X is tracking
[ahead/behind/on] plan...")
- KPI table with actual vs. budget vs. prior period
- Red/yellow flags with context
- Covenant compliance status (if applicable)
- Questions for management
Step 4: Trend Analysis
If multiple periods are provided:
- Chart key metrics over time (revenue, EBITDA, cash)
- Identify trends — accelerating, decelerating, or stable
- Compare vs. underwriting case
Important Notes
- Always ask for the budget/plan to compare against if not
provided
- Don't assume sector-specific KPIs — ask what matters for this
company
- If covenant levels aren't known, ask the user for the credit
agreement terms
- Output should be board-ready — concise, factual, no fluff