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Cash Flows and Financial Analysis

Cash Flows and Financial Analysis. Chapter 3. © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. Financial Information—Where Does It Come From, etc . Financial information is the responsibility of management Created by within-firm accountants

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Cash Flows and Financial Analysis

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  1. Cash Flows and Financial Analysis Chapter 3 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning

  2. Financial Information—Where Does It Come From, etc. • Financial information is the responsibility of management • Created by within-firm accountants • Creates a conflict of interest because management wants to portray firm in a positive light • Published to a variety of audiences

  3. Users of Financial Information • Investors and Financial Analysts • Financial analysts interpret information about companies and make recommendations to investors • Major part of analyst’s job is to make a careful study of recent financial statements • Vendors/Creditors • Use financial info to determine if the firm is expected to make good on loans • Management • Use financial info to pinpoint strengths and weaknesses in operations

  4. Sources of Financial Information • Annual Report • Required of all publicly traded firms • Tend to portray firm in a positive light • Also publish a less glossy, more businesslike document called a 10K with the SEC • Brokerage firms and investment advisory services (Value Line Investment Survey)

  5. The Orientation of Financial Analysis • Accounting is concerned with creating financial statements • Finance is concerned with using the data contained within financial statements to make decisions • The orientation of financial analysis is critical and investigative

  6. The Statement of Cash Flows • Income doesn’t represent cash in the firm’s pocket • The Statement of Cash Flows (AKA: Statement of Changes in Financial Position) provides info on the actual movement of cash in and out of the company • Constructed from the Balance Sheet and Income Statement

  7. How the Statement of Cash Flows Works—Preliminary Examples • Requires two consecutive balance sheets and one income statement from which the statement of cash flows is generated • Takes net income for the period and makes adjustments • Then takes the balance sheet items and examines the changes

  8. Q: Suppose Joe Jones has after-tax income of $50,000 and spends $40,000 on normal living expenses during the year. Also assume that at the beginning of the year he had a bank balance of $10,000 and no other assets or liabilities. Further, assume that during the year he bought a new car costing $30,000, financing $25,000 at the bank with a car loan. At the end of the year he has $15,000 in the bank. Generate a Statement of Cash Flows for Joe. Example How the Statement of Cash Flows Works—Preliminary Examples A: Inflows of cash are known as sources and outflows are known as uses. The Statement of Cash Flows will show how Joe ended up with $15,000 in his bank account. Joe generated a net source of cash of $10,000, or the difference between his income and normal living expenses. He also experienced an inflow of $25,000 from the car loan and used $30,000 to buy the car. Thus, Joe’s Statement of Cash Flows is:

  9. Cash income $50,000 Cash used on living expenses (40,000) Net source of cash from income $10,000 Source of cash from loan $25,000 Use of cash to buy auto ($30,000) Net inflow/(outflow) of cash $5,000 Example Beginning cash balance $10,000 Net cash flow $5,000 Ending cash balance $15,000 How the Statement of Cash Flows Works—Preliminary Examples

  10. Business Cash Flows • Cash Flows Rules • The following rules can be applied to any business’s financial statements • Asset increase  use of cash • Asset decrease  source of cash • Liability increase  source of cash • Liability decrease  use of cash

  11. Business Cash Flows • Standard Presentation • Statement of Cash Flows organized to show • Operating activities • Running business on day-to-day basis • Investing activities • When firm buys or sells things to do business • Includes long-term purchases and sales of financial assets • Financing activities • When firm borrows money, pays off loans, sells stock or pays dividends

  12. Figure 3.2: Business Cash Flows A successful business has to withdraw cash to finance growth and replace worn-out assets, pay taxes and for profit.

  13. Figure 3.3: The Cash Conversion Cycle Product is converted into cash, which is transformed into more product, creating the cash conversion cycle.

  14. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows Also assume firm paid a $500 dividend and sold stock for $800 during the year.

  15. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows • Operating Activities • Involve the Income Statement and current Balance Sheet accounts • Involves activities firm does on a day-to-day basis such as • Buying inventory • Producing and selling product • Paying expenses and taxes • Collecting credit sales Focus of activities is generating net income—the beginning of a cash flow statement. • Money from operating transactions runs through current balance sheet accounts

  16. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows • Thus, for Belfry the cash from Operating Activities is

  17. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows • Investing Activities • Typically include purchasing Fixed Assets • Examine the change in GROSS Fixed Assets, not net • Because the net value includes an adjustment for depreciation • Depreciation has already been included under operating activities • Thus, for Belfry the cash from investing activities is • Purchase of Fixed Assets ($2,000)

  18. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows • Financing Activities • Deal with the capital accounts, long-term debt and equity • Thus, for Belfry the cash from financing activities is

  19. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows • The Equity and Cash Accounts • The change in equity is not included because the changes are reflected elsewhere in the Statement of Cash Flows • Net Income is included in Cash Flows from Operations • Sale of stock and dividends are considered under financing activities • The change in the cash account isn’t considered because the sum of cash flows from operations, financing activities and investing activities must equal the change in the cash account

  20. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows • Thus, for Belfry, the final portion of the Statement is

  21. Constructing the Statement of Cash Flows While the firm was profitable, it still had to borrow money and sell stock to finance the increase in Fixed Assets.

  22. Free Cash Flows • Refers to cash generated beyond reinvestment needs • Under normal conditions most firms generate positive cash flow from operations • Some of these funds are used to maintain long-run competitive position • Replace worn-out fixed assets • Pay dividends on Preferred Stock

  23. Ratio Analysis • Used to highlight different areas of performance • Involves taking sets of numbers from the financial statement and forming ratios with them

  24. Comparisons • Ratios when examined separately don’t convey much information • History—examine trends (how the value has changed over time) • Competition—compare with other firms in the same industry • Budget—compare actual values with expected or desired values

  25. Common Size Statements • First step in a financial analysis is usually the calculation of a common size statement • Common size income statement • Presents each line as a percent of revenue • Common size balance sheet • Presents each line as a percent of total assets

  26. Common Size Statements

  27. Ratios • Designed to illuminate some aspect of how the business is doing • Average Value • When a ratio calls for a balance sheet item, may need to use average values (of the beginning and ending value for the item) or ending values • If an income or cash flow figure is combined with a balance sheet figure in a ratio—use average value for balance sheet figure • If a ratio compares two balance sheet figures—use ending value

  28. Ratios • Categories of Ratios • Liquidity—indicate firm’s ability to pay its bills in the short run • Asset Management—show how the company uses its resources to generate revenue, profit and to avoid cost • Debt Management—show how effectively the firm has used borrowed funds and whether or not it has a high amount of leverage • Profitability—allow assessment of the company’s ability to make money • Market Value—give an indication of how investors feel about the company’s financial future

  29. Liquidity Ratios • Current Ratio • To ensure solvency the current ratio has to exceed 1.0 • Generally a value greater than 1.5 or 2.0 is required for comfort

  30. Liquidity Ratios • Quick Ratio (or Acid-Test Ratio) • Measures liquidity without considering inventory (the firm’s least liquid current asset)

  31. Asset Management Ratios • Average Collection Period (ACP) • Measures the time it takes to collect on credit sales • AKA days sales outstanding (DSO) • Should use an average Accounts Receivable balance, net of the allowance for doubtful accounts

  32. Asset Management Ratios • Inventory Turnover • Gives an indication of the quality of inventory as well as how it is managed • Measures how many times a year the firm uses up an average stock of goods • A higher turnover implies doing business with less tied up in inventory • Should use average inventory balance

  33. Asset Management Ratios • Fixed Asset Turnover • Appropriate in industries where significant equipment is required to do business • Long-term measure of performance • Average balance sheet values are appropriate

  34. Asset Management Ratios • Total Asset Turnover • More widely used than Fixed Asset Turnover • Long-term measure of performance • Average balance sheet values are appropriate

  35. Debt Management Ratios • Need to determine if the company isn’t using so much debt that it is assuming excessive risk • Debt could mean long-term debt and current liabilities • Or it could mean just interest-bearing obligations—generally long-term debt • Debt Ratio • A high debt ratio is viewed as risky by investors • Ending balance sheet items are appropriate • Usually stated as percentages

  36. Debt Management Ratios • Debt-to-equity ratio • Can be stated several ways (as a percentage, or as a x:y value) • Measures the mix of debt and equity within the firm’s total capital

  37. Debt Management Ratios • Times Interest Earned • TIE is a coverage ratio • Reflects how much EBIT covers interest expense • A high level of interest coverage implies safety

  38. Debt Management Ratios • Cash Coverage • TIE ratio has problems • Interest is a cash payment but EBIT is not exactly a source of cash • By adding depreciation back into the numerator we have a more representative measure of cash

  39. Debt Management Ratios • Fixed Charge Coverage • Interest payments are not the only fixed charges • Lease payments are fixed financial charges similar to interest • They must be paid regardless of business conditions • If they are contractually non-cancelable

  40. Profitability Ratios • Return on Sales (AKA: Profit Margin, Net Profit Margin) • Measures control of the income statement: revenue, cost and expense • Represents a fundamental indication of the overall profitability of the business

  41. Profitability Ratios • Return on Assets • Adds the effectiveness of asset management to Return on Sales • Measures the overall ability of the firm to utilize the assets in which it has invested to earn a profit

  42. Profitability Ratios • Return on Equity • Adds the effect of borrowing to ROA • Measures the firm’s ability to earn a return on the owners’ invested capital • If the firm has substantial debt, ROE tends to be higher than ROA in good times and lower in bad times

  43. Market Value Ratios • Price/Earnings Ratio (PE Ratio) • An indication of the value the stock market places on a company • Tells how much investors are willing to pay for a dollar of the firm’s earnings • A firm’s P/E is primarily a function of its expected growth

  44. Market Value Ratios • Market-to-Book Value Ratio • A healthy company is expected to have a market value greater than its book value • Known as the going concern value of the firm • Idea is that the combination of assets and human resources will create an company able to generate future earnings worth more than the assets alone today • A value less than 1.0 indicates a poor outlook for the company’s future

  45. Du Pont Equations • Ratio measures are not entirely independent • Performance on one is sometimes tied to performance on others • Du Pont equations express relationships between ratios that give insights into successful operation

  46. Du Pont Equations • Du Pont equation involves ROE, which can be written several ways: States that to run a business well, a firm must manage costs and expenses as well as generate lots of sales per dollar of assets.

  47. Related to the proportion to which the firm is financed by other people’s money as opposed to owner’s money. Du Pont Equations • Extended Du Pont equation states ROE in terms of other ratios

  48. Du Pont Equations • Extended Du Pont equation states that the operation of a business is reflected in its ROE • However, this result—good or bad—can be multiplied by borrowing • The way you finance a business can exaggerate the results from operations • The Du Pont equations can be used to isolate problems

  49. Sources of Comparative Information • Generally compare a firm to an industry average • Dun and Bradstreet publishes Industry Norms and Key Business Ratios • Robert Morris Associates publishes Statement Studies • U.S. Commerce Department publishes Quarterly Financial Report • Value Lineprovides industry profiles and individual company reports

  50. Limitations/Weaknesses of Ratio Analysis • Ratio analysis is not an exact science and requires judgment and experienced interpretation • Examples of significant problems • Diversified companies—because the interpretation of ratios is dependent upon industry norms, comparing conglomerates can be problematic • Window dressing—companies attempt to make balance sheet items look better than they would otherwise through improvements that don’t last • Accounting principles differ—similar companies may report the same thing differently, making their financial results artificially dissimilar • Inflation may distort numbers

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