ADMN1107 Distance Education
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ADMN1107 Distance Education Chapter 12 – Financial Statement Analysis Financial Statement Analysis - Keys Auditors’ Report Why have it and its limitations Reading the financial statements This includes the notes to the financial statements Why read the notes to the financial statements?
ADMN1107 Distance Education
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ADMN1107 Distance Education Chapter 12 – Financial Statement Analysis
Financial Statement Analysis - Keys • Auditors’ Report • Why have it and its limitations • Reading the financial statements • This includes the notes to the financial statements • Why read the notes to the financial statements? • Using the past to predict the future
Financial Statement Analysis • Time-series analysis • Year to year analysis with the same company • Over a period of 2 or more years • Sales • Receivables • Expenses
Financial Statement Analysis • Cross-Sectional Analysis • From one company to another • Examples?
Financial Data • There are three general types of types of data • Raw Financial Data [F/S Data] • Common Size Ratio [Interrelationships] • Ratio Data
Performance Ratios • Return on Assets (ROA) • Type of return that is earned on the investment in assets • Cross industry analysis must be done carefully • Return on Equity (ROE) • The return the shareholders are earning on their investment in the company
Performance Ratios • Leverage • How much is financed by debt holders • If a large portion is financed from debt holders then it’s said to be ‘highly leveraged’
Turnover Ratios • Accounts Receivable • Inventory Turnover • Accounts Payable Turnover
Short-Term Liquidity Ratios • Current Ratio • Quick Ratio • Includes Cash, Accounts Receivable and Marketable Securities
Long-term Liquidity Ratios • Debt/Equity Ratios • Measure of how much debt a company has in relation to equity
Earnings Per Share • Mandatory disclosure for public companies • Often quoted and will fluctuate based on certain factors • Revenue Projections • Quarterly earnings • Basic calculates what we know [remove preferred dividends]
Earnings Per Share • Diluted EPS takes a ‘what if’ approach • It can get very complicated as it includes things such as: • Convertible Bonds • Stock Options
Pitfalls of Ratio Analysis • “Rules of thumb” may not work for all industries • Comparison between companies may not be valid [size, market share, etc.] • A ratio on its own is just a number