Guide to Financial Statements
Overview
Three major financial statements:
- The Income Statement
- The Balance Sheet
- The Cash Flow Statement
Objectives:
- Explain the underlying equation of each statement.
- Understand the structure and purpose of each statement.
Why are they important?
Financial statements provide information about a company’s financial health.
- Managers use them to strategize and identify areas that require their intervention.
- Shareholders use them to ensure their capital is well managed
- Outside investors use them to identify opportunities.
- Lenders and suppliers use them to assess the creditworthiness of businesses they plan to deal with.
- The government uses them for tax-collection and regulation purposes.
Understanding financial statements is important when
- Making sound investment decisions
- Dealing with companies
- Managing a department
- Starting your own business
- Managing your personal finances
- Taking a job with a company
Financial statements are commonly provided together, as part of a company’s annual report. You will often need to look at all three statements to fully answer a question or make a decision.
Income Statement
The Income Statement:
- Specifies the financial results of a business over a defined period of time – usually a month, a quarter, or a fiscal year.
- States whether a business is making a profit or not
Underlying equation:
Revenues – Expenses = Profit/Loss (Net Income)
Sales/Revenue:
- Includes money generated by the company by selling
its products or services to customers
- Sometimes referred to as sales
- Only includes revenue associated with the company’s main operations
Expense Categories:
- Cost of Goods Sold
- Operating Expenses (including depreciation)
- Interest Expense
- Income Tax
The income statement – in addition to the balance sheet –
follows the accrual accounting system.
Accrual Accounting:
- Revenues are recorded when earned and expenses are recorded when incurred.
- Therefore, earned revenues may include sales on credit for which the company has yet to receive cash and expenses may include bills the company has not yet paid.
Cost of Goods Sold:
- Includes all expenses directly related to making and storing a company’s goods
- Examples: raw materials, warehousing, direct labor costs
- Service companies do not have this section on their income statements, since they don’t produce products.
By deducting cost of goods sold from sales/revenue you arrive at gross profit.
Operating Expenses:
- Include all costs incurred in operating the business
that are not directly related to the production and
storage of a company’s goods.
- Examples: administrative salaries, research and development expenses, marketing cost
- Cost of Goods Sold vs. Operating Expenses:
If an expense can be eliminated without affecting the production and storage of the company’s products, then it’s an operating expense and not part of the cost of goods sold.
Depreciation:
- Listed with operating expenses on the income
statement.
- Instead of including the full price of a fixed (longterm)
asset under operating expenses, its cost is
spread over the years it will be used and listed under
depreciation.
- The reason: The asset will benefit the company for
several years – not just during the year it was
purchased. Without depreciation, a company would be overstating its first-year expenses and understating its expenses over the following years during which the asset is used.
By subtracting operating expenses and depreciation from gross profit, you arrive at operating earnings. These earnings are also called earnings before interest and taxes, or EBIT for short.
Many companies and investors look at the ratio of EBIT to revenues as a measurement of profitability. Companies use this number to compare changes in their profitability over time and to compare their profitability to other companies in their industry. If the percentage is smaller than a competitor, it means the company is less profitable; if it is bigger, then the company is more profitable.
Interest Expense – interest paid by the company for loans it incurred
Income Tax – tax levied by the government for income
EBIT Sales X 100 = % Revenue that is Operating Earnings
REVENUE – EXPENSES = NET INCOME
Net Profit:
Revenue/Sales > Expenses
Net Loss:
Revenue/Sales < Expenses
OVERVIEW:
Income Statement:
- Equation: Revenues – Expenses = Profit/Loss
- Summarizes the financial results of a business over a
fixed period of time.
- Tells whether a company is making a profit or not
- Can help spot trends and turnarounds when compared
to previous periods
Sales/Revenue
– Cost of Goods Sold
= Gross Profit
– Operating Expenses
– Depreciation
= Operating Earnings (EBIT)
– Interest Expense
– Interest Expense
= NET INCOME