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Accounting I

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... a Financial Report' Apply what we have learned so far to: Home Depot ... In 2005, which company (Pfizer, Home Depot or Ebay) had the highest Return on Assets? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Accounting I


1
Accounting I
  • How to Read a Financial Report
  • January 25, 2007

2
Today
  • Quiz
  • How to Read a Financial Report
  • Apply what we have learned so far to
  • Home Depot
  • Pfizer
  • Ebay
  • Case Prep

3
Quiz
  • What is the difference between depreciation and
    amortization? Which is a cashless expense?
  • Explain the difference between gross margin and
    net margin?
  • In 2005, which company (Pfizer, Home Depot or
    Ebay) had the highest Return on Assets?

4
The Basics
  • The Balance Sheet.
  • As if time stood still
  • The Income Statement.
  • does this company make money??

5
The Balance Sheet
  • Assets Liabilities Equity
  • This is called the standard accounting model

6
The Left Side of the Balance Sheet
  • Assets Stuff the company needs to run the
    business day to day. Like
  • -Cash
  • -Marketable Securities
  • -Accounts Receivable
  • -Inventories
  • -Prepaid Expenses
  • These are called Current Assets and are often
    referred to as working assets

7
The Left of the Balance Sheet
(contd)
  • Assets But the company may also needs things
    like
  • Land
  • Buildings
  • Machinery/Computer Networks
  • less accumulated depreciation
  • This is called Net Property, Plant Equipment

8
The Left Side of the Balance Sheet (contd)
  • Assets And, finally we add
  • - Intangibles (goodwill, patents, etc) less
    accumulated amortization
  • - Investment Securities, at cost
  • To get
  • TOTAL ASSETS

9
What is Your Favorite Asset?
  • Cash (and cash equivalents)?
  • Marketable Securities?
  • Accounts Receivables?
  • Inventory?
  • Prepaid expenses?
  • Property Plant and Equipment?
  • Intangibles?
  • Investment Securities?

10
The Right Side of the Balance Sheet
  • Liabilities What the company owes
  • - Accounts Payable
  • - Accrued Expenses
  • - Taxes Payable
  • - Current Portion of Long Term Debt
  • These are called Current Liabilities and
    are usually due in less than a year.

11
The Right Side of the Balance Sheet (contd)
  • Liabilities What the company can pay back in
    more than a year.
  • Long term Debt (loans, bonds,etc)
  • Deferred Income Taxes
  • These are called Long Term Liabilities

12
The Right Side of the Balance Sheet (contd)
  • Shareholders Equity What the owners
    (shareholders) own
  • - Preferred Stock
  • - Common Stock
  • - Additional Paid in Capital
  • - Retained Earnings

13
Historically, those who analyze and understand
what is behind the numbers in the Financial
Statements earn more than those who create
them.
  • A simple picture is a good place to start.

14
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17
To analyze, you need some tools (Ratios
Valuations). These are the Balance Sheet basics
  • Debt to Equity Liabilities / Equity
  • Just how leveraged is this company ???
  • Current Ratio Current Assets (CA)/Current
    Liabilities (CL)
  • Will/Can this thing run out of money ???
  • Quick Ratio Current Assets (less
    inventory)/Current Liabilities
  • A better judge of the potential to run out of
    money
  • Book Value Total Assets- intangible
    assets-liabilities-preferred stock
  • What the company might be worth if liquidated

18
The Income Statement
  • Net Sales (what the company sold)
  • less
  • Cost of Sales (what did it cost the company to
    make/acquire the stuff it sold?)
  • equals
  • Gross Profit (what is left to pay everyone
    else)
  • less
  • Selling, general administrative expenses
  • Depreciation and Amortization
  • equals
  • Operating Income
  • plus
  • Interest Income (what the company made on its
    cash securities)
  • less
  • Interest Expense (what the company is paying to
    borrow money)
  • less
  • Income Taxes (the governments cut of the
    companys success)
  • equals
  • Net Income (what the owners get to keep or
    reinvest back into the business)

19
More tools to analyze the Income Statement
  • Gross Margin (Net Sales- Cost of Sales)/Net
    Sales
  • The most basic measure of a companys viability
  • Operating Margin Operating Income/Net Sales
  • Earnings before interest and taxes
  • Net Profit Margin Net Income / Net Sales
  • The true bottom line for shareholders
  • Earnings per Fully Diluted Share Net Income /
    of diluted shares
  • Very useful for year over year measurements
  • Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation,
    Amortization (EBITA) Net IncomeInterest
    ExpenseTaxes Depreciation Amortization
  • A measure of Operating Cash Flow
  • A very Wall Street thing to measure

20
Statement of Cash Flow
  • The Accrual Thing
  • The key to understanding if cash is being
    produced or consumed by the activities and
    operations of the company.
  • There are 3 basic activities of the company as it
    relates to Cash Flow
  • Operating
  • Investing
  • Financing

21
The Total Business
  • What were sales for the past twelve months
  • Are sales growing, declining, or flatwhy?
  • What is the profit marginis it growing?
  • How are the margins versus the competition? How
    does it compare with other industries?
  • What is the asset velocity?
  • How much cash is the company generating?
  • What does the external environment look like?

22
CasesMM 010
  • Peter Bell
  • John Clavin
  • January 25, 2007

23
Why
  • Real world
  • Tends to sticklearning not just remembering
  • Help build oral (talking and listening)
    communication skills
  • More personal experiencemore enjoyableand more
    powerful

24
Keep in mind
  • No right answer
  • Each of you is responsible for the class
    discussion and what you learn/take away from the
    discussion
  • Case prep take a lot of timeonly you will know
    when you are done

25
What is it
  • A true story
  • Description of a management situation
  • Vehicle for learning
  • They are developed thru research, 200 hours or
    more per case
  • There are a set of objectives that the case
    writer has before approaching a given company
    about writing a casethe case writer sets up the
    case to encourage second opinions.

26
Preparation
  • Read in once thru relative quickly to find major
    issues and who the protagonist is
  • Re-read the case in more detail to understand and
    make note of the situation at hand and the role
    of the protagonist in that situation (put
    yourself in the shoes of the protagonist in the
    case)
  • Focus your analysis on the major issue
  • What is it?
  • What are the alternatives in front of the
    protagonist?
  • What is your recommendation of the action that
    should be taken?
  • What is the desired outcome of this course of
    action?

27
Prep (continued)
  • Keep it real world
  • Feel free to meet in small groups (3 to 5 people)
    to review, discuss, and prepare
  • Make sure you understand the facts in the case
  • Dont forget the language of business and your
    business acumeni.e.. the numbers in the case
    (often in the appendices) are key to
    understanding the story being told
  • Use the prep questions as a guide
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