1 / 23

Financial Statement Analysis

13. Financial Statement Analysis. Relationship to previous material. Focus has been: What goes into 3 basic financial statements (Income Statement, Balance sheet, Statement of Cash Flows) Now focus is: How statements are analyzed by management, investors, and creditors.

Télécharger la présentation

Financial Statement Analysis

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. 13 Financial Statement Analysis

  2. Relationship to previous material • Focus has been: • What goes into 3 basic financial statements (Income Statement, Balance sheet, Statement of Cash Flows) • Now focus is: • How statements are analyzed by management, investors, and creditors

  3. Objective of a Business • Create value for its shareholders while maintaining a sound financial position • Return on investment • Sound financial position • Other important objectives include: • Employee satisfaction • Social responsibility • Ethical considerations

  4. Overview • GAAP does not define ratios • Multiple equally valid approaches to ratios and analysis • Managers (e.g. division manager, sales manager) should be measured to items that they control • Investors and top management are most interested in overall performance or broadest measures of performance: • Understanding less broad measures of performance may give additional insight into overall performance

  5. Structure of analysis • From broadest to more specific levels • Principal value of financial analysis: • Suggests questions not answers: • Ratio comparisons start with supposition that all other things are equal

  6. Categories of ratios which measure: • Overall performance • Profitability • Investment utilization • Financial condition • Dividend policy

  7. Making comparisons • Finding the appropriate standard is difficult • A high ratio (e.g. current ratio, ROI) may be good or bad, it can’t be viewed in isolation: • Is a high CR good or bad? • Is a high ROI always good? • Values of ratios compared across time  longitudinal analysis, or trend analysis

  8. Overall Measures • Return on assets (ROA) = (net income + interest*(1-tax rate))/ total assets: • How well management is using a pool of capital: • Before considering financing decisions • Measures how an enterprise uses its funds • May be used to evaluate individual business units in a large company when managers do not influence financing decision (i.e. how assets are financed)

  9. Overall Measures • Return on shareholders’ equity (ROE) = Net income/shareholders’ equity: • Or, (net income -preferred dividends) / Common shareholders’ equity: • Common shareholders’ equity = total shareholders’ equity - preferred stock • Reflects return on funds invested by shareholders • Of interest to current and prospective shareholders

  10. Overall Measures • Return on invested capital (ROIC) = (net income + interest(1-tax rate))/ invested capital: • Invested capital = permanent capital = capital employed = long-term liabilities + shareholders’ equity = working capital + non-current assets • Return on funds entrusted to the firm for relatively long time

  11. Price/Earnings (PE) ratio • Measure of overall performance • Market price per share/EPS • Market price is not controlled by company, reflects all information available to the market • Reflects how investors judge future performance or prospects of the company • Commonly compared to other companies in same industry

  12. Profitability measures • Profit margin = net income/net sales = a measure of overall profitability • Common size financial statements = Vertical analysis: • Express each item on the income statement as a percentage of net sales

  13. Investment utilization measures • How well are assets managed • Profitability measures focus on Income Statement • Investment utilization measures involve balance sheet and income statement amounts

  14. Investment turnover • Asset turnover = Sales revenue/total assets • Invested capital turnover = Sales revenue/invested capital • Equity turnover = Sales revenue/shareholders’ equity

  15. Working capital measures • Days’ receivables = Receivables/(sales  365) • Days’ payables = operating payables/(pretax cash expenses  365): • Approximate pre-tax cash expenses = all expenses except taxes - depreciation expense

  16. Working capital measures • Days’ inventory = inventory/(cost of goods sold  365): • Inventory turnover = cost of goods sold/inventory

  17. Cash conversion cycle • Receivables conversion period (i.e. days’ receivables) + inventory conversion period (i.e. days’ inventory) - payment deferral period (i.e. days’ payables) = operating cycle - payment deferral period • A measure of liquidity: • Indicates time interval for which additional short-term financing might be needed to support a spurt in sales

  18. Financial condition ratios • Liquidity • Solvency

  19. Liquidity • Ability to meet current obligations: • Tests for size and relationship between current liabilities and current assets • Liquidity measures: • Current ratio = current assets/current liabilities • Acid Test (or quick) ratio = monetary current assets / current liabilities: • Monetary current assets = current assets - inventory - prepaid assets

  20. Solvency • Ability to meet interest costs and repayment schedules associated with long-term debt • Solvency measures: • Debt/equity ratio = total liabilities/shareholders’ equity: • Alternatively, Debt/equity ratio = long-term liabilities/shareholders’ equity • Debt/capitalization ratio = long-term debt/total invested capital

  21. Solvency Measures (Continued) • Total invested capital = long term debt + shareholders’ equity • Times interest earned = income before interest/interest expense • Ratio of Cash generated by operations to total debt

  22. Dividend policy • Dividend yield = dividends per share/ market price per share • Dividend pay-out = dividends/net income • Provides info on how growth is financed: • Less dividends paid means more earnings are retained to fund growth

  23. 13 End of Chapter 13

More Related