1 / 23

Cash Flow Statement

Cash Flow Statement. Why Cash Flow Statement?.

Olivia
Télécharger la présentation

Cash Flow Statement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cash Flow Statement

  2. Why Cash Flow Statement? • Shareholder value is now widely accepted as an appropriate standard for performance in US business. The stock market sends a clear message that earning per share is not the most important measure. Now is growth for growth’s sake. What matters is long-term cash generation. (Werner & LeBer, “Managing for Shareholder Value--From Top to Bottom,” Harvard Busines Review, Nov.-Dec. 1989 pp. 52-65.)

  3. Basic Form of Cash Flow Statement • Cash Flow From Operating Activities • Direct method or indirect method (direct requires also a reconciliation of net income to cash flow from operating activities) • Cash Flow from investing activities • Cash Flow from financing activities • Total (positive or negative) cash flow is added to beginning cash balance and should result in ending cash balance

  4. Flow from Operating Activities • Includes: • Current assets • except Marketable securities and s-term notes receivable which are investing • Current Liabilities • except s-t notes payable which are financing • Revenue and Expenses (includes interest expense and revenue, and dividends received)

  5. Flow from Investing Activities • Includes: • Short-term and long-term investments • Short-term and long term notes receivable • Property, Plant and Equipment (depreciation affects operating activities) • Intangible Assets

  6. Flow from Financing Activities • Includes: • Short-term and long-term loans • Capital Stock and Paid in Capital in excess of par • Retained earnings (net income aspect is operating) • Dividends Paid

  7. General Theory • Take revenue or expense account (includes cash and accrual) • adjust out accrual amounts • Result is net cash in or out. • Too expensive to classify all cash transactions into operating, financing, investing activities. Cheaper to use accrual systems and adjust out accrual information

  8. Operating ActivitiesIndirect Method • Net Income • + Depreciation exp (noncash exp) • + Losses from sale of assets • (full amount of sale already included in investing section) • - Gains from sale of assets • (full amount of sale already included in investing section) • - increases in current assets • + decreases in current assets • + increases in current liabilities • - decreases in current liabilities • = Net cash from operating activities

  9. Operating Activities Direct Method • + Cash Received from Customers • - Cash paid for inventory • - Cash paid for operating expenses • - Cash paid for income taxes • - Cash paid for interest • + Cash received from dividends and interest • = Net cash from operating activities

  10. Cash Received from Customers • Sales • - Increase in A/R (receive less cash) OR + Decreases in A/R (receive more cash) • - writeoffs (beg allowance +bad debt exp. - ending allowance) • + Increase in unearned revenue (receive more cash) OR - Decrease in unearned revenue (receive less cash) • = Cash Received from Customers

  11. Sales + Beg Net A/R - End Net A/R - Bad debt exp adj - Beg unearned rev + End undearned rev = Cash from Customers Sales + Beg A/R - End A/R - writeoffs = beg allowance + bad debt exp. - ending allowance - Beg unearned rev + End unearned rev = Cash from Customers Cash Received from Customers(other variations)

  12. Cash Paid For Inventory • Cost of Goods Sold • + End Inventory • - Beginning Inventory • = Purchases • + Beg A/P • - End A/P • = Cash paid for inventory

  13. Cash Paid for Operating Expenses • Operating Expenses (do not include interest exp., depreciation exp., nor gains & losses from sale of investments) • - Beg prepaids • + End prepaids • + Beg accrued exp • - End accrued exp • = Cash paid for operating expenses

  14. Cash Paid for Income Taxes • Income Tax Exp • + Beg tax payable • - End tax payable • = Cash paid for income Taxes

  15. Cash Paid for Interest • Interest Exp • + Beg interest payable • - End interest payable • = Cash paid for interest

  16. Cash Received from dividends and interest • Dividend and Interest Income • + Beg interest receivable • - End interest receivable • = Cash Received from dividends and interest

  17. Cash Flow from Investing Activities • Cash received (sale) or paid (purchase) for: • short term investments • long-term investments • property plant and equipment • Whole cash amount received or paid. • Look at change in investment and fixed asset accounts but may need more specific information

  18. Example Equipment • Balance Sheet Amount Change: Beg $300,000, Ending $400,000 • Can your just say net cash out for equipment was $100,000? • Why?

  19. Example Equipment Continued • Sold Equipment for $65,000 cash that had book value of $40,000 (original cost $100,000) • Bought equipment $200,000 with $80,000 down and the rest on a long term note payable • Accumulated depreciation increased by $50,000

  20. Example EquipmentResults on Cash Flow Statement • Cash from sale of equipment $65,000 • Gain on sale $25,000 subtracted from NI on indirect method (make sure amt is not included in direct method either) • Depreciation exp $110,000 ($50,000 increase in accum deprec from B/S + $60,000 acum depr reduced when sold equip added back in indirect method (make sure amt is not included in direct method operating expenses • Cash paid for purchase of equipment $80,000 • Noncash investing & financing Activities • Issued long-term note payable for some equipment $120,000

  21. Equipment ExampleThink about journal entries • Cash 65,000Accum Depr 60,000 Equip 100,000 Gain 25,000 Sale of equipment • Depr Exp 110,00 Accum. Depr 110,000 Year end Adj J/E for equip depr. • Equipment 200,000 Cash 80,000 L-T Note Payable 120,000 Equip Purchase

  22. Financing Activities • Cash received from: • sale of stock • issuance of debt • Cash paid for • Payment of debt (principle only, interest is in operating activities) • Payment of dividends • Look at change in stock, debt and retained earnings (May need more details) (for R/E only dividends portion applies to financing activities while net income portion should tie into indirect method in operating activities)

  23. Ways to Check Your Work • Indirect and Direct methods must equal each other • Net cash flow added to beginning cash balance must equal ending cash balance (Marketable securities are most often included as part of these cash balances.) • In template must account for every change in B/S accounts and every item on income statement (some noncash items are adjusted out or not included in cash flow calculations)

More Related