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Financial Statement Analysis

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Title: Financial Statement Analysis


1
Financial Statement Analysis
2
What are the functions of financial statements?
  • Provide information to owners and creditors about
    the firms current status and past financial
    performance
  • Provide a convenient way for owners and creditors
    to set performance targets and impose
    restrictions on managers
  • Provide a convenient way for a firms financial
    planning

3
Types of financial statements
  • Balance Sheet
  • Income Statement
  • Statement of Cash Flows

4
The Balance Sheet
  • The balance sheet shows a firms assets (what it
    owns) and liabilities (what it owes)
  • The difference between a firms assets and
    liabilities is the firms net worth
  • For corporations, net worth is called
    stockholders equity

5
A typical balance sheet
  • Assets
  • Current Assets
  • Cash short term securities
  • Accounts Receivable
  • Inventory
  • Total Current Assets
  • Fixed (long-term) assets
  • Property/plant/equipment
  • Investments
  • Other assets
  • Total Assets
  • Liabilities Shareholder Equity
  • Current Liabilities
  • Accounts payable
  • Short-term debt (due in one year)
  • Accrued expenses
  • Total Current Liabilities
  • Long-term Liabilities
  • Long-term debt
  • Total Liabilities
  • Shareholder Equity
  • Common equity (paid in)
  • Retained earnings
  • Total liabilities shareholder equity

6
Do financial analysts disagree with balance sheet
information?
  • Main issue Book values vs. market values
  • Balance sheets omit some economically significant
    assets called intangible assets, such as RD
  • Intangible assets, such as goodwill, are not
    reported at market values
  • Some economically significant liabilities are
    also omitted, e.g. pending lawsuits

7
The Income Statement
  • The income statement presents in a summary form
    the profitability of a firm over an annual period
  • The income statement presents information on
  • Revenues (sales)
  • Cost of goods sold
  • Operating expenses
  • Financing costs of doing business
  • Tax expenses

8
A typical income statement
  • Sales revenue
  • - Cost of goods sold
  • Gross margin
  • - Operating expenses
  • EBITDA
  • - Depreciation Amortization
  • EBIT (Operating income)
  • - Interest payment
  • Taxable income
  • - Taxes
  • Net Income

9
How is net income allocated?
  • Dividends
  • Change in retained earnings
  • Earnings per share
  • Basic Net income / shares of common stock
    outstanding
  • Diluted Adjusts for stock options and
    convertible debt

10
Accounting vs. economic measures of earnings
  • Accounting definition of earnings ignores
    unrealized gains or losses in market value of
    assets and liabilities
  • Accrual accounting recognizes revenues and
    expenses in the period that they take place,
    which does not necessarily match the cash flows
    of a firm

11
  • The firms expenses are separated into operating,
    financing and capital
  • Accounting depreciation does not attempt to
    measure economic depreciation (loss in an assets
    value)
  • Inconsistencies in the application of this
    categorization of expenses (e.g., RD is treated
    as an operating expense)

12
Statement of Cash Flows
  • The statement of cash flows shows all the cash
    that flows in and out of a firm during a
    specified period of time
  • Note that income statements show revenues and
    expenses
  • Cash flow statements are useful because
  • They show a firms cash position over time
  • They avoid accounting judgments about revenues
    and expenses found in income statements

13
A typical cash flow statement
  • Cash flow from operations
  • Net income
  • Depreciation
  • - Increase in accounts receivable
  • - Increase in inventories
  • Increase in accounts payable
  • Total cash flow from operations
  • Cash flow from investing activities
  • - Investment in plant and equipment
  • Cash flow from financing activities
  • - Dividends paid
  • Increase in short-term debt
  • Change in cash and marketable securities

14
Financial Ratio Analysis Evaluating a firms
performance
  • Financial ratio analysis is a popular way of
    using information from financial statements to
    evaluate a firms performance
  • Through the analysis of financial ratios, we can
    easily identify the strengths and weaknesses of a
    firm

15
How are financial ratios used?
  • Calculating financial ratios allows us to
  • Examine the firms performance through time (e.g.
    last five years) and identify trends
  • Compare the firms performance with other
    comparable firms (peer group) and identify the
    firms competitive advantage
  • Some financial ratios (e.g. price-earnings ratio,
    market-to-book ratio) are useful in valuation
    analysis, such as valuing private firms

16
Classification of financial ratios
  • Profitability ratios
  • Liquidity ratios
  • Efficiency ratios
  • Financial leverage ratios
  • Market value ratios
  • Payout policy ratios

17
Profitability Ratios
  • After-tax operating margin Measures the firms
    effectiveness in generating profits from
    operations
  • (EBIT taxes)/Sales
  • Return on assets Measures the firms operating
    effectiveness in generating profits from its
    assets
  • (EBIT taxes)/Average Assets

18
  • Return on equity Measures the firms
    profitability from the perspective of the equity
    investor
  • Net Income/Stockholders Equity
  • Return on capital Measures the firms
    effectiveness in generating profits from the
    capital invested in the firm
  • (EBIT taxes)/(BV Debt BV Equity)

19
Liquidity Ratios
  • Current ratio Compares current assets (cash,
    inventory, accounts receivable) to current
    liabilities (obligations due within one year)
  • Current Assets/Current Liabilities
  • Quick or Acid Test ratio Variant of current
    ratio that distinguishes current assets that can
    be converted quickly into cash (cash, marketable
    securities) from those that cannot (inventory,
    accounts receivable)
  • (Cash Marketable Securities)/Current Liabilities

20
Efficiency Ratios(Asset Management Ratios)
  • Asset Turnover ratio Indicates how efficiently
    the firm is using its assets to generate sales
  • Sales/Average Total Assets
  • Accounts Receivable Turnover ratio Indicates how
    rapidly the firm is collecting its credit,
    measured by how many times accounts receivable
    are rolled over during a year
  • Sales/Average Accounts Receivable

21
  • Inventory Turnover ratio Indicates the relative
    liquidity of inventories, measured by how many
    times the firms inventories are replaced during
    a year
  • Cost of Goods Sold/Average Inventory
  • Days Receivable Outstanding, Days Inventory Held
  • 365/Receivable Turnover
  • 365/Inventory Turnover

22
Financial Leverage Ratios
  • Times Interest Earned Ratio (Interest Coverage
    Ratio) Measures the firms capacity to meet
    interest payments from pre-debt, pre-tax earnings
  • EBIT/Interest Expenses
  • Debt Capitalization ratio Measures how much debt
    a firm is using as a proportion of its total
    capital (total value of debt plus equity)
  • Debt/(Debt Equity)

23
  • Debt to Equity Ratio Measures debt as a
    proportion of the firms equity
  • Debt/Equity
  • The above two ratios can also be calculated by
    using only long-term debt
  • Moreover, these ratios must be calculated using
    market instead of book values for debt and
    equity. Market-based debt ratios give a better
    indication of a firms ability to borrow

24
Market Value Ratios
  • Price to Earnings ratio (P/E) and Market to Book
    ratio Measure the relation between the
    accounting measures (value) of the firm and its
    market value
  • Price per Share/Earnings per Share
  • Price per Share/Book Value per Share

25
Payout Policy Ratios
  • Dividend Payout ratio It relates dividends paid
    to the earnings of the firm
  • Dividends/Earnings
  • Dividend Yield ratio It relates the dividend
    paid to the price of the stock
  • Annual Dividends per Share/Price per Share

26
The DuPont Analysis
  • A useful way to understand the sources that drive
    a firms ROA and ROE
  • We can disaggregate ROA as follows
  • ROA (Net Profit Margin) ? (Total Asset
    Turnover)

27
  • Asset turnover and net profit margin (return on
    sales) drive ROA
  • If a firm can reduce working capital without
    hurting its competitiveness, then asset turnover
    ? and ROA ?
  • If a firm cuts back capital expenditures, then,
    in the short run, ROA ? because asset turnover ?
    (due to total assets ?) and return on sales ?
    (the latter because future depreciation ? and,
    thus, net income ?)
  • But, this strategy, will probably hurt the firms
    competitiveness and, thus, ROA in the long run

28
  • Moreover, we can disaggregate ROE as follows
  • ROE (ROA) ? (1 Debt Ratio)
  • As we see, ROE can increase through an increase
    in ROA or the Debt Ratio

29
  • Financial analysts value more a firm that
    increases its ROE through higher ROA
  • A firm that increases ROE by taking on more debt
    also increases the probability of being in
    financial distress (bankruptcy)

30
Examples and Applications
  • See handouts on Oracle Corp. distributed in class
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