Welcome! October 18, 2010.  Placing a stock order  Accounting Basics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How to read a FINANCIAL REPORT
Advertisements

Copyright 2003 Prentice Hall Publishing Company1 Chapter 11 Financial Statement Analysis.
October 20 th, 2008 presentation:. "FASB stands for the Financial Accounting Standards Board. They are among the most useless people on the planet and.
October 12 th, 2009 presentation:. "FASB stands for the Financial Accounting Standards Board. They are among the most useless people on the planet and.
Mutual Investment Club of Cornell Week 1: Financial Accounting Feb. 3, 2010.
© 1999 by Robert F. Halsey In this chapter, we will cover the four financial statements that are provided by companies to shareholders and other interested.
The Balance Sheet and Notes to the Financial Statements.
Analyzing Financial Statements 9/01/03
Chapter 13  Cash Flow Statements. Chapter 13Mugan-Akman Cash Flow Statement based on cash accounting amount of net income in a period is usually.
Chapter 13 – Financial Ratios and Firm Performance  Learning Objectives  Create common-size statements  Analyze performance with internal data and financial.
Financial Statement Risk analysis
Financial Statements, Cash Flows, and Taxes
Accounting Basics: Agenda Introduction to Financial Statements – Balance Sheet – Income Statement – Statement of Cash Flows Metrics and Ratios.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.
Ch. 2 Financial statement, Taxes and Cash flows. 1. Balance sheet Summarizing what a firm owns (assets) and what a firm owes (liabilities) Asset = Liability.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Understanding Business, 7/e © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved Chapter 1717 Understanding Financial Information.
MSE608C – Engineering and Financial Cost Analysis
Financial Statement Analysis
16 Statement of Cash Flows Accounting 26e C H A P T E R Warren Reeve
Chapter Thirteen Financial Statement Analysis Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Thirteen Financial Statement Analysis.
© 2009 Cengage Learning/South-Western Financial Statement and Cash Flow Analysis Chapter 2.
Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP, PhD Chapter 20 Ratios Analysis.
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin CHAPTER 13 Financial Statement Analysis.
Finance and Accounts Analysing Accounts Pr. Zoubida SAMLAL.
Name DivRoll No Gufran Siddiqui A 53 Aabid Kalokhe a 20 Shehzad Khan A 30 Asif valsangkar a 61 Farhan Ansari a 04 Shoaib shaikh a 50 Zeeshan azmi a 06.
Part 6 Financing the Enterprise © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education.
PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA CHAPTER.
1 Benefits of Ratios Summary statistic Enable comparison of: one company’s performance over time different companies in same industry sector different.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Financial Statement Analysis Chapter 14.
Reporting and Analyzing Cash Flows Chapter 17. Purposes of the Statement of Cash Flows Designed to fulfill the following: – predict future cash flows.
Statement of Cash Flows 16 Principles of Financial Accounting, 11e Reeve Warren Duchac.
The Analysis of the Cash Flow Statement
BSAD 221 Introductory Financial Accounting Donna Gunn, CA.
Financial Statements and Cash Flow CHAPTER 2.1. Key Concepts and Skills Understand the information provided by financial statements Differentiate between.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Slide 1 Preliminary Press Releases Releasing Financial Information Quarterly and Annual Reports Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Chapter 9: Financial Statement Analysis
Previous Lecture Purpose of Analysis; Financial statement analysis helps users make better decisions Financial Statements Are Designed for Analysis Tools.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Analyzing Financial Statements Chapter 14.
October 1 st Common Cents Investment Group October, 2012 Agenda  Helpful hints  Today in the Market  Stocks vs. Bonds vs. Options  Accounting.
Unit 5. The purpose of Unit 5 is to define the four basic financial statements and discuss the information presented on each.
CDA COLLEGE BUS235: PRINCIPLES OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS Lecture 1 Lecture 1 Lecturer: Kleanthis Zisimos.
Lecture 28. Chapter 17 Understanding the Principles of Accounting.
Analyzing Financial Statements Chapter 14 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Financial Accounting Fundamentals
Analyzing Financial Statements Chapter 13 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Analyzing Financial Statements
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Understanding Business, 7/e © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved Chapter 1717 Understanding Financial Information.
Analyzing Financial Statements
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Corporate Finance, 7/e © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 2-0 CHAPTER 2 Accounting Statements and Cash Flow.
Valuation Part 1 Presented by: Elson ong Yale-NUS Investment Masterminds 1) Several Key Financial Metrics 2) How to Identify Them in An Annual Report.
© 2009 Cengage Learning/South-Western Financial Statement and Cash Flow Analysis Chapter 2.
© McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Chapter 14 Analyzing Financial Statements.
Financial Statements, Forecasts, and Planning
Chapter 4a principles of corporate finance principles of corporate finance Lecturer Sihem Smida Sihem Smida Analyzing and interpreting Financial statement.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter Nine Financial Statement Analysis © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education.
Unit 5. The purpose of Unit 5 is to define the four basic financial statements and discuss the information presented on each.
Ratio Analysis…. Types of ratios…  Performance Ratios: Return on capital employed. (Income Statement and Balance Sheet) Gross profit margin (Income Statement)
7 CHAPTER CASH FLOW ANALYSIS 1. What you will learn from this chapter 2  Relevance of Cash Flows  What cash flow statements tell you  What is free.
Chapter 15 Financial Ratios and Firm Performance  Financial Statements  Internal Uses of Financial Statements  Financial Ratios  External Uses of Financial.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 2-0 Corporate Finance Ross  Westerfield  Jaffe Seventh Edition.
Book Cover Chapter Thirteen. ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2006McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Thirteen Financial Statement Analysis.
Chapter 3 Learning Objectives
Chapter Outline 2.1 The Balance Sheet 2.2 The Income Statement
Chapter 3 Learning Objectives
Financial Statement Analysis
Understanding Financial statements
Accounting Fundamentals
Financial Statements: Basic Concepts and Comprehensive Analysis
Presentation transcript:

Welcome! October 18, 2010

 Placing a stock order  Accounting Basics

 Market – brokers buys/sells for the current market price  Limit –an order to buy or sell a set number of shares at a specified price or better A Limit Order guarantees price, but not an execution  Stop-Loss – similar to limit, buy or sell at a certain price Limit downside of short sell Protect existing profits  Stop Limit – combines stop order (1) w/ limit order (2) Control when the trade takes place  Trailing Stop – parameter w/ trailing feature

 Entry Form

 Needed for… Ability to accurately and properly interpret financial statement data Use in valuation modeling  Discounted Cash Flow Model, etc. Understanding the health of a business

Identifying past, current, and forecasting future performance  Return on Equity, Free Cash Flow, other ratios How it affects the manner in which its components are reported  Mark-to-market regulations, etc.  This has become a major hotspot lately; if you’re interested, do a Google search for “FAS 157”

 These are what publicly traded companies issue through the SEC and GAAP to report quarterly and yearly performance  Many sites (Yahoo, Google Finance, etc.) report semi-accurate data However, often times they are not the best source for in-depth research  Best to look at the actual filing Sources?  investing.businessweek.com investing.businessweek.com  sec.edgar-online.com sec.edgar-online.com

 What are the three (primary) financial statements? Balance Sheet  Also called Statement of Financial Position  Snapshot Income Statement  Also called Statement of Earnings Statement of Cash Flows

 This statement lists all of the companies revenues, expenses, gains, and losses for a given period of time Example: Apple, Inc.  Revenue = Sale from an iPod, Macbook, etc.  Expense = Cost of goods sold (items needed to manufacture a product), salaries/wages, research & development, taxes etc.

 Important to distinguish differences within each type of account Is that revenue part of our normal operations or from interest/investments? What type of expenses is the company incurring and in what volume? Is this gain or loss occurring frequently or once in a lifetime?

 What is depreciation/amortization? When a company purchases an asset, it has a limited useful life (5 years, 20 years, etc.) Depreciation is an annual expensing of the original purchase price of said asset There are many methods available, but the principle remains the same Key point: Depreciation in a NON-CASH expense

 Net Income and Earnings Per Share Ultimately, every company reports net income (or loss) for the given period  It’s important to know everything to goes into calculating this number Earnings Per Share (EPS) =  Allows comparison of company profitability regardless of overall size

 Similar to the Income Statement, as it provides information about a company during a given period of time  However, the Statement of Cash Flows only deals with what the company did with their CASH  A company may be profitable according to their Income Statement, but they may have trouble generating cash

 The different components  Cash flows from… Operating activities Investing activities Financing activities

 Useful for determining with the company did with its cash Are they collecting a reasonable amount from their normal operations? Are they spending a lot of their cash on new assets, prospects for expansion, etc.? If they have an excess amount sitting around, are they paying out a dividend?

 Free Cash Flow (FCF): Operating Cash Flow  Inflow or outflow from everyday operations Capital Expenditures  Outflow used to acquire or upgrade physical assets such as machinery, buildings, etc. Good indicator of whether or not the company is expanding and still has cash on hand to pay its current debt obligations

 Reports a company’s assets, liabilities, and shareholder’s equity at an exact point in time  Differs from the previous two in this aspect; they cover a period of time whereas the Balance Sheet is a “snapshot”  Useful in determining the company’s structure

 A = L + SE

 The different components: Assets  These represent future economic benefits  Can be current and non-current  Ranked on the Balance Sheet in order of their ease of liquidity (how easy can you convert this asset into cash?)  The most liquid assets are listed at the top (cash, marketable securities, etc.)

Liabilities  These represent future economic sacrifices  Can be current and non-current  Important to know how much debt the company is obligated to pay in the next few years Shareholder’s Equity  Represents the owner’s interest (that’s you!) in the company  Contains an important account: R ETAINED E ARNINGS  Takes a company’s net income and shows if they pay it out as a dividend or re-invest it

 Important for analyzing the capital structure of the company Do they have a lot of cash relative to their debt? If not, do they have a lot of liquid assets? How do they finance their investments? Mainly through stock issuance or with bonds/borrowing? Do they have a lot of intangibles (goodwill, patents, etc.)?

 This is Apple’s condensed Balance Sheet for the years  What’s good about it? What might not be so good?  How might they be structured differently from a newly formed company?

 At a later date we will introduce more advanced concepts of accounting Financial Ratios  Profitability, Leverage, Solvency, Liquidity, Efficiency  Comparison to other companies in the same industry Valuation modeling  Is the company’s equity more than its market cap? Anything else you guys would like to learn more about

 Questions?  Excel in Finance: An Intensive 2-Day Seminar in Financial Modeling and Corporate Valuation Price: $150 Nov 20/21 Time: 9AM - 5PM Location: Lazenby Hall 0021 Registration Link: