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FA3 Lesson 10. Financial statement analysis and cash flow 1.Ratio analysis 2.Cash flow statement 3.Horizontal and vertical analysis 4.Saturday review class Review exercises: A17-34, A23-25
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1. Ratio analysis Comparison of proportional relationship between two different financial statement items. This removes the effect of size differences between companies, or for the same company over time: Facilitates comparisons (inter-company and temporal) Provide informed basis for decision-making Etc.
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Problems with ratio analysis Ratios are only as good as the numbers in the calculations Ratios are only meaningful if there is a clear understanding RE: the relationship between the numerator and denominator Ratios require a basis for comparison (benchmarks) Ratios point out potential problem areas, but usually do not give definitive answers Ratio results depend on accounting decisions
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Types of ratios a.Profitability ratios b.Activity ratios c.Solvency ratios d.Liquidity ratios
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a. Profitability ratios General form = Income/Average Investment, Where Income = net income, EBIT, EBITDA, Income + interest after tax, Net income – preferred dividends,... Investment = Shareholders’ equity, Assets, Sh. Eq. + long-term debt,... The numerator and denominator must be logically consistent.
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Leverage effect ROE = Income/Average shareholders’ equity ROA = Income + Interest expense after tax Average assets Int. exp. after tax = Int. exp. X (1 – tax rate) ROE – ROA = Effect of leverage This measures additional return to shareholders generated by effective use of debt (borrowing at a low rate to invest in high return projects)
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Example: Safety Ltd. vs Leverage Ltd.
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Components of profitability ratios Du Pont formula ROA = operating margin X asset turnover, where ROA = EBIT/average total assets, Operating Margin = EBIT/Revenue, and Asset turnover = Revenue/Average total assets. Companies can earn high ROA by combining high turnover and low margin, or by combining low turnover and high margin.
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b. Efficiency ratios Asset turnover = Revenue/Average Assets AR turnover = Credit sales/Average AR Average collection period = 365/AR turnover Inventory turnover = COGS/Average inventory
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c. Solvency ratios Debt-equity = Debt/Invested capital Debt = liabilities, long-term debt,... Invested cap. = total assets, shareholders’ eq.,... Times interest earned = Net income + interest exp + income tax exp Interest expense
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d. Liquidity ratios Current ratio = Current assets/Current liabilities Quick ratio = Monetary current assets Monetary current liabilities Defensive-interval ratio = Monetary current assets Annual operating expenditures/365
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2. Cash flow statement EXAMPLE: A23-23
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3. Horizontal and vertical analysis Horizontal analysis involves recasting financial statements, using prior years’ data as a yardstick. Items are presented as a percentage of the equivalent item in the base (usually oldest) year. Vertical (or common size) analysis involves recasting each of the financial statement items as a percentage of some base item in the same year. The base is usually net sales for the income statement and total assets for the balance sheet. EXAMPLES: A23-1, A23-2
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4. Saturday Review Class Saturday, 10 AM – 1 PM Review exercises A17-34, A23-25
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