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Welcome to Week 16!

MERRY CHRISTMAS !!!!. Welcome to Week 16!. Financial Accounting: Chapter 12 and 13 Ashton Converse Statement of Cash Flows and Analysis. Welcome Review End of the Semester Schedule Final Exam A look into Chapter 12 Application of Material and Statement of Cash Flows

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Welcome to Week 16!

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  1. MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!! Welcome to Week 16! Financial Accounting: Chapter 12 and 13 Ashton Converse Statement of Cash Flows and Analysis

  2. Welcome • Review • End of the Semester Schedule • Final Exam • A look into Chapter 12 • Application of Material and Statement of Cash Flows • Seeing Chapter 13 through discussions Objectives/Schedule

  3. What is stockholders’ equity? • What does unqualified opinion mean? • What does qualified opinion mean? • What does earnings per share mean? • Why do Americans’ celebrate Christmas? Review Time: Don’t Stop Yet

  4. Today, we will research through chapter 12 and maybe 13 • Thursday, we will finish chapter 13, have an activity, and then discuss more information about the exam if we have time. • Next Week, we will discuss information about the final exam and either have an activity, movie, or get out early depending on our time End of the Semester Schedule

  5. Did you all find a statement of cash flows? • What is(are) the purpose(s) of the statement of the cash flows? • See the where and when the cash is moving • Report cash receipts and cash payments • 3 parts: operating, financing, and investing activities • Predicts future cash flows • Evaluates management decisions • Determines the ability to pay dividends CHPT. 12 - Statement of Cash Flows

  6. On the statement of cash flows, “cash” means more than just cash in the bank • It includes cash equivalents (equal to, similar) • High liquid short-term investments that can be converted into cash immediately • Money Market Accounts • Investments in U.S. Government Securities What Does “Cash” Mean?

  7. Operating Activities • Activities that create revenue or expense in the entity’s major line of business • Affect the income statement Investing Activities • Activities that increase or decrease the long-term assets available to the business Financing Activities • Activities that obtain from investors and creditors the cash needed to launch and sustain the business • Money that people invest into the company THR3E Business ACTIVITIES

  8. Indirect Method • The more commonly used method • Is made from net income reconciled to net cash provided by operating activities, (minus any depreciation adjustments) • Direct Method • Lists the major categories of operating cash receipts (collections from customers receipts of interest and dividends) and cash disbursements (payments to suppliers, to employees, for interest and income taxes) Example given for each in the book Two Formats for Operating Activities

  9. Exhibit 12-3 Part 1 and Part 2 reports the template that should be followed to make a statement of cash flows for any company. • Read through the template and notice at the least the main areas • OA: net income, adjustments, and net cash • IA: sales, liabilities, and purchases of assets • FA: Stock, borrowing, payments, and net • NI or NL: beginning cash + net increase = end cash balance Statement Template

  10. I will state an event and I want you to discuss with in small groups which activity you think it is part of. • I will call on someone randomly and we will see if your team is correct • So tell me if the event is part of operating activities, investing activities, or financing activities • Which of the 3 does the event belong to? Lets Practice Categorizing

  11. Take time now to read through the summary problem • Do NOT read the answer right away! • Work together in teams to see if you can create the statement of cash flows using the indirect method with what is given. • Write it on a separate page or paper • Then check your answer and see if you did it correctly • If not, look for the mistake and learn from it! Mid-Chapter Summary Problem

  12. Read through Exhibit 12-11 Part 1 and 2 and see if you can find the differences between indirect method and direct method. • Read through the direct method to understand the differences (FASB requires it) • You do not need to memorize though. • We will focus mainly on the indirect method. • Feel welcome to discuss with people around you after you have read through and found one difference Look: You see the Differences?

  13. Investors may want to know how much cash a company can “free up” for new opportunities Free Cash Flow: • The amount of cash available from operations after paying for planned investments in plant, equipment, and other long-term assets Free Cash Flow

  14. Free Cash Flow is found by taking the net cash provided by operating activities and subtracting (-) cash payments marked for investments in plant assets FCF = Net cash provided by OA – Cash payments for investments in plant assets • If a company has a net cash inflow of 2.3 billion from operations and plans to spend 1.9 billion for better technology, they will have .4 billion leftover as free cash flow to invest in an opportunity. Free Cash Flow Equation

  15. Investors • How much in dividends can I expect to receive in stock? • Is the stock price likely to increase or decrease? • What is the future stock prices likely to be? Creditors • Can the company pay the interest and principal at the maturity of a loan? Managerial Questions and Decision Guidelines

  16. If you were an investor, how would you evaluate a company? • How would the financial statements help you? • Discuss this with 1-3 other people and be ready to share. CHPT 13 – Financial Statement Analysis

  17. Horizontal Analysis • Study of percentage changes in comparative financial statements • Computing a percentage change requires 2 things: • Calculate the dollar amount of the change from the base (earlier) period to the later period • Divide the dollar amount of change by the base-period amount. Different Analysis Tools

  18. Ford Motor Inc. Horizontal Analysis (in millions) 2011 2010 Amount Percentage Revenue...... $8,380 $7,757 $623 8.0% • YUM’s revenues increased by 8% during 2011 Step 1: Compute the dollar amount of change from 2010 to 2011… 8,380 – 7,757 = 623 Step 2: Divide the dollar amount of change by the base-period amount… 623/7,757 = 8.0% Example of Horizontal Analysis

  19. Trend Percentages • A form of horizontal analysis that indicates the direction a business is taking. • How are things changing over time? (maybe 1, 5, 10, or so years) Trend % = Any Year $/Base Year$ Horizontal Analysis

  20. Vertical Analysis • Analysis of a financial statement that reveals the relationship of each statement item to a specified base, which is the 100% figure. • For vertical analysis on the income statement, the base is usually revenue. • If in normal conditions a company’s net income is 12% revenue. Then a drop to 10% may cause the company’s stock price to fall. Different Analysis Tools

  21. Vertical Analysis Percent is found when you take any income statement item and divide by the total revenue. VAP % = Each income statement item/total revenue • Exhibit 13-4 Gives us an example • Notice how the percentages are up and down (vertical) you can then see how each item is a percent of the total. • All percentages should be less than Vertical Analysis

  22. A financial statement that reports only percentages (%) • Each item is a percentage of the revenue amount. • %’s ONLY…no #’s Common Size Statements

  23. The comparison of a company to a standard set by other companies, with a view toward improvement. • When comparing statements of other companies, one may be larger than the other. • Example: Starbucks is bigger than Bridge Café • A direct comparison of their statements would not be meaningful. • The statements need to be converted to a common size and their percentages compared Benchmarking

  24. Analysts find the statement of cash flows more helpful for spotting weakness than for gauging success. • WHY is this usually true? • A Shortage of cash can throw a company into bankruptcy, but lots of cash does not ensure success. Use the Statement of Cash Flows

  25. The ratios we discuss may be classified in the following ways: • Ability to pay current liabilities • Ability to sell inventory and collect receivables • Ability to pay long-term debt • Profitability • Analyze stock as an investment • Usually companies use computer software and programs to help match up statements and analyze outcomes. Ratios, Ratios, and more Ratios!

  26. Measures a business’s ability to meet its short-term obligations with its current assets • Current assets minus current liabilities Working capital = Current assets – current liabilities • Generally, the larger the working capital, the better the ability to pay debts. Working Capital

  27. All measures that we have discussed are recalled in this chapter. • There is a chart in the back of this chapter that shows all of the main ratios, their equation, and their brief information. • For the Edition 6 book, it is on page 630 • For Edition 7 book, it is on page … Old Measures

  28. Measure whether a company’s operations have increased stockholders’ wealth. Capital Charge = (notes payable + current maturities of long term debt + long-term debt + stockholders’ equity) * Cost of capital CC = (Beginning balances) x Cost of Capital • Cost of Capital: • A weighted average of the returns demanded by the company’s stockholders and lenders. Capital Charge

  29. Come to Class on Thursday, as we have an applicable activity and may either discuss the final exam…or may next week. • Thank you for a good semester and for the ones that tried to work hard through the whole semester. • I am thrilled to see what you do next in your life. Have fun and keep me informed on where you are going and what you are doing! Ending Thoughts

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