analysis of financial statements lecture 5
TRANSCRIPT
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Analysis of Financial Statements
Lecture 5Basics of Analysis
1
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Chapter 5, Slide #2
Ratio Analysis
• Liquidity– Measures a firm’s ability to meet its current obligations
• Leverage (borrowing capacity)– Measures the degree of protector for long-term creditors
• Profitability– Measures the earning ability of a firm
• Investor-focused
• Cash flow– Indicate liquidity, borrowing capacity, and profitability
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Chapter 5, Slide #3
Ratio Analysis
• Interpreted in comparison with– Prior ratios– Competitor ratios– Industry ratios– Predetermined standards
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Chapter 5, Slide #4
Complexities and Context
• Use of average data from balance sheet accounts– Necessary when comparing against income
statement data– Does not
• Eliminate cyclical or seasonal variations• Capture changes that occur unevenly throughout the year
• Analysis must be performed and understood within the context of– Native accounting principles– Native business practices and culture
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Chapter 5, Slide #5
Common-Size Analysis
• The use of percentages is usually preferable to the use of absolute amounts
• Vertical analysis– All amounts of a year expressed as a percentage of a
base amount (e.g., net sales revenue, total assets)
• Horizontal analysis– Amounts for comparative years are expressed as a
percentage of the base year amount
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Chapter 5, Slide #6
Vertical Analysis
Sales revenue 100,000$ 100.0% 95,000$ 100.0% 91,000$ 100.0%Cost of goods sold 65,000 65.0% 60,800 64.0% 56,420 62.0%
Gross profit 35,000 35.0% 34,200 36.0% 34,580 38.0%
Operating expenses:Selling expense 14,000 14.0% 11,400 12.0% 10,000 11.0%General expense 16,000 16.0% 15,200 16.0% 13,650 15.0%
Total operating expense 30,000 30.0% 26,600 28.0% 23,650 26.0%
Operating Income before taxes 5,000 5.0% 7,600 8.0% 10,930 12.0%Taxes related to operations 1,500 1.5% 2,280 2.4% 3,279 3.6%
Net Income 3,500$ 3.5% 5,320$ 5.6% 7,651$ 8.4%
Melcher CompanyIncome Statement
2005 2004 2003For the Years Ended December 31
Each financial statement element is presented as a percentage of a designated base.
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Chapter 5, Slide #7
Horizontal Analysis
2005 2004 2003 2005 2004 2003
Sales revenue 100,000$ 95,000$ 91,000$ 109.9% 104.4% 100.0%Cost of goods sold 65,000 60,800 56,420 115.2% 107.8% 100.0%
Gross profit 35,000 34,200 34,580 101.2% 98.9% 100.0%
Operating expenses:Selling expense 14,000 11,400 10,000 140.0% 114.0% 100.0%General expense 16,000 15,200 13,650 117.2% 111.4% 100.0%
Total operating expense 30,000 26,600 23,650 126.8% 112.5% 100.0%
Operating Income before taxes 5,000 7,600 10,930 45.7% 69.5% 100.0%Taxes related to operations 1,500 2,280 3,279 45.7% 69.5% 100.0%
Net Income 3,500$ 5,320$ 7,651$ 45.7% 69.5% 100.0%
Melcher CompanyIncome Statement
For the Years Ended December 31
Each financial statement element is presented as a percentage of a base amount from a selected year.
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Chapter 5, Slide #8
Year-to-Year Change Analysis
• Use both absolute and percentages• Guidelines:
– When an item has value in the base year and none in the next period, the decrease is 100%
– A meaningful percent change cannot be computed when one number is positive and the other number is negative
– A percent change is incomputable when there is no figure for the base year.
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Chapter 5, Slide #9
Industry Variations
• Financial components vary by type of industry• Merchandising
– Inventory is a principal asset– Sales may be primarily for cash or on credit
• Service– Inventory is low or nonexistent
• Manufacturing– Large inventory holdings– Substantial investment in plant assets
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Chapter 5, Slide #10
Descriptive Information
• Narrative data– Annual report– Trade periodicals– Industry reviews
• Further explains the financial position of a firm
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Chapter 5, Slide #11
Comparisons
• Provides context for analysis of ratios and financial data
• Common types– Trend analysis– SIC: Standard Industrial Classification– NAICS: North American Industry Classification
System– Industry averages; competitor comparisons
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Chapter 5, Slide #12
Comparisons: Trend Analysis
• A study of the financial history of a firm• Longitudinal ratio comparison
– Falling– Rising– Relatively constant
• Highlight– Effective management– Evidence of problems
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Chapter 5, Slide #13
Comparisons: SIC• Classifies business by industry• Defines industries in accordance with the
composition and structure of the economy• Coding structure
– Division– Major group– Industry group– Industry
• Reported in SEC registrant filings
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Chapter 5, Slide #14
Comparisons: Industry
• Industry comparison complicated by highly diversified companies
• Financial services– Base their analysis on industry placement– Provide composite industry data
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Chapter 5, Slide #15
Comparisons: Caution
Ratios are subject to variance from:• Differing data• Inconsistent formula construction• Optional (elective) accounting treatment• Different fiscal year-ends• Varying financial policies• Inconsistent basis (before or after tax)
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Chapter 5, Slide #16
Relative Size of Firm
• Comparison of disparate size firms– Capital market access– Economy of scale (purchasing)– Wider customer base
• Information– Absolute: amplifies comparison difficulty– Common-size: eliminates some of the difficulty
• Percent of market helps to define relative size
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Chapter 5, Slide #17
The Users of Financial Statements
• Management– Analyze information from the perspective of both
investors and creditors• Investors
– Analysis of past and present information to project the future prospects of the entity
• Creditors– Short-term: focus is on current resources– Long-term: consider the future prospects of the firm