Title: Introduction to Financial Accounting, 7th Edition PowerPoint Presentations
1Chapter 13
Financial Statement Analysis
2Learning Objectives
- After studying this chapter, you should be able
to - Locate and use the many sources of information
about company performance. - Analyze the components of a company using trend
analysis and other techniques. - Use the basic financial ratios to guide your
thinking. - Evaluate corporate performance using ROA, ROE,
and EVA. - Calculate EPS under complex circumstances.
- Adjust for nonrecurring items.
3Sources of InformationAbout Companies
- Financial statement analysis - using financial
statements to assess a companys performance - Information about publicly traded companies comes
in many forms and may be found in many places. - Annual reports
- SEC filings and databases
- Company press releases
- Articles that appear in the financial press
4Sources of InformationAbout Companies
- The annual report is important to investors
because of its completeness and its reliability
due to the audit performed by an independent
auditor. - The annual report includes
- Financial statements
- Footnotes to the financial statements
- A summary of accounting principles used
- Managements discussion and analysis of the
financial results - The auditors report
- Comparative financial data for a series of years
- Narrative information about the company
5Sources of InformationAbout Companies
- Publicly traded companies must also prepare
reports for the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC). - Form 10-K - presents financial statement data in
greater detail than the financial statements in
annual reports - Form 10-Q - includes quarterly financial
statements that provide more timely but less
complete information than annual reports
6Sources of InformationAbout Companies
- Company press releases provide the basis for
articles in the financial press such as The Wall
Street Journal and Business Week. - Services such as Value Line,
Moodys Investors Services,
Standard and Poors Industrial Surveys, and
Dun Bradstreet provide useful information to
investors.
7Sources of InformationAbout Companies
- The Internet is changing the way that people make
investments. - Many investors now buy and sell securities
without the help of a broker. - Much of the market information
is available electronically,
usually for free
from various sources.
8Sources of InformationAbout Companies
- Large investors often require pro forma
statements which are carefully formulated
expressions of predicted results. - Any investor should take the time to gather as
much information about potential investments as
possible. - There are many sources of information for
investors to use.
9Objectives of FinancialStatement Analysis
- Although different investors demand different
returns, they all use financial statement
analysis for common reasons. - To predict their expected returns
- To assess the risks associated with those returns
- Financial statement analysis focuses on past
performance to predict future performance.
10Objectives of FinancialStatement Analysis
- Creditors want to know about short-term liquidity
and long-term solvency. - Short-term liquidity - an organizations ability
to meet current payments as they become due - Long-term solvency - an organizations ability to
generate enough cash to repay long-term debts as
they mature
11Objectives of FinancialStatement Analysis
- Equity investors are more concerned with returns
in the form of dividends and increased market
price of the stock. - These investors are naturally more interested in
profitability. - Profits spur both dividends and
increased stock prices.
12Evaluating Trends and Components of the Business
- Evaluating trends and components of a business
are two ways of looking at financial information. - Trend analysis involves comparing financial
trends from one year to another. - Evaluating components of a business can be done
in more than one way. - Relationships among elements of the financial
statements may be examined. - Components may also be thought of as separate
business units or segments. These components may
be examined.
13Trend Analysis
- Trends are predictable patterns that have been
observed in the past and are expected to continue
into the future. - A pattern must be identified, and expectations of
whether the trend will continue must be formed. - Trends can be shown as changes in amounts from
year to year or as percentage changes from year
to year.
14Trend Analysis
- The dollar amount of the change is simply the
current year minus the previous year. - The percentage change is computed as follows
15Trend Analysis
- STELLAR CORPORATION
- Income Statements
- for the Years Ended December 31, 2002 and 2001
- Increase Increase
- 2002 2001 (Decrease)
(Decrease) - Sales 98,600 89,500 9,100
10.2 - Expenses
- Wages expense 45,800 42,900
2,900 6.8 - Rent expense 12,000 12,000
0 0.0 - Utilities expense 6,500 6,450 50
0.8 - Depreciation expense 5,000 5,900
(900) (15.3) - Total expenses 69,300 67,250
2,050 3.0 - Net Income 29,300 22,250 7,050
31.7 -
16Trend Analysis
- Changes in dollar amounts and percentage terms
help to expose patterns. - Understanding these patterns is most important.
- The answers to why items changed tell a lot about
how a company is run, how it will perform in the
future, and whether or not it would be a good
investment. - Analysts generally look at several years worth
of financial information to discover trends.
17Common-Size Statements
- Common-size statements - financial statements
expressed in component percentages - The income statement is expressed as a percentage
of sales. - This makes it easy to compare percentages to
those of other companies because percentages are
a common index. - The balance sheet is expressed as a percentage of
total assets. - This is often referred to as component
percentages because they measure each component
as a percentage of the total.
18Common-Size Statements
- For the income statement, sales is set at 100
and each other element is expressed as a
percentage of the sales figure. - For the balance sheet, the total assets amount is
set at 100, and each other element is expressed
as a percentage of the total assets figure.
19Common-Size Statements
- STELLAR CORPORATION
- Income Statements
- for the Years Ended December 31, 2002 and 2001
20Managements Discussionand Analysis
- Managements discussion and analysis - a required
section of the annual report that concentrates on
explaining the major changes in the income
statement, liquidity, and capital resources - Managements discussion often
includes a discussion of trends and
analysis of components.
21Segment Reporting
- Many large companies are involved in more than
one type of business activity or market. - Each individual type of business activity or
market may be considered a segment. - The FASB requires information on a business
segment to be reported based on the way it is
reported to management. - The information is reported consistent with the
way the company manages the business.
22Segment Reporting
- When analyzing segment data, two things should be
considered. - Evaluating segment data forces us to ask
important questions that help us to truly
understand the business. - Truly understanding the business means not only
understanding what is sold and how much is made
but also interpreting how financial reports
summarize dynamic changes in the business.
23Financial Ratios
- The cornerstone of financial statement analysis
is the use of ratios. - Financial ratios are sometimes grouped into four
categories - Short-term liquidity ratios
- Long-term solvency ratios
- Profitability ratios
- Market price and dividends ratios
24Financial Ratios
- Short-term liquidity ratios
25Financial Ratios
- Long-term solvency ratios
26Financial Ratios
27Financial Ratios
- Market price and dividend ratios
28Evaluating Financial Ratios
- Financial ratios are evaluated using three types
of comparisons. - Time-series comparisons - comparisons of a
companys financial ratios with its own
historical ratios - Benchmarks - general rules of thumb specifying
appropriate levels for financial ratios - Cross-sectional comparisons - comparisons of a
companys financial ratios with the ratios of
other companies or with industry averages
29Ratios
- Financial analysis using ratios is useful to
investors because the ratios capture critical
dimensions of the economic performance of the
company. - Managers use ratios to guide, measure, and reward
workers. - Often companies base employee bonuses on a
specific financial ratio or a combination of some
other performance measure and a financial ratio.
30Ratios
- Ratios mean different things to different groups.
- A creditor might think that a high current ratio
is good because it means that the company has the
cash to pay the debt. - However, a manager might think that a high
current ratio is undesirable because it could
mean that the company is carrying too much
inventory or is allowing its receivables to get
too high.
31Ratios
- Because financial ratios may be interpreted
differently by different users, the users of the
financial ratios must understand the company
and the business before drawing conclusions.
32Operating Performance andFinancial Performance
- Measures of profitability are affected by both
financing and operating decisions. - Financial management is concerned with where the
company gets cash and how it uses that cash. - Operating management is concerned with the
day-to-day activities that generate revenues and
expenses. - Ratios that assess operating efficiency should
not be affected by financial management
performance.
33Operating Performance
- Rate of return on investment - evaluates the
overall success of an investment by comparing
what the investment returns with the amount of
investment initially made
Rate of return on investment
34Operating Performance
- Income may be defined differently for alternative
purposes. - Net earnings
- Pretax income from operations
- Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT)
- Invested capital may also be defined differently.
- Stockholders equity
- Total capital provided by both debt and equity
sources
35Operating Performance
- Operating performance is best measured by pretax
operating rate of return on total assets, often
referred to as return on total assets.
Pretax operating rate of return on total assets
36Operating Performance
- The right side of the previous equation is
actually composed of two more important ratios. - This equation may also be expressed as
Pretax operating rate of return on total assets
Operating income percentage on sales
Total asset turnover
37Operating Performance
- The expanded expression of pretax operating rate
of return on total assets highlights that
operating income percentage and asset turnover
will each increase the rate of return on assets. - Using these two ratios allows manipulation of
either one to determine what happens to the rate
of return under different scenarios.
38Operating Performance
Operating Income
Operating Income on Sales
Sales
Pretax Return on Total Assets
x
Sales
Total Asset Turnover
Average Total Assets
39Operating Performance
- This decomposition of return on total assets can
also be applied to the return on equity. - This is often referred to as the DuPont analysis.
or
40Financial Performance
- Debt and equity financing must be balanced in
order to achieve good financial performance. - Firms must choose how much debt is appropriate.
- The firms must also choose how to split their
debt between short-term debt and long-term debt. - The prudent use of debt is a major part of
intelligent financial management.
41Financial Performance
- Short-term debt must be repaid or refinanced in a
short period of time. - If a company has trouble repaying the debt, it
will also generally have trouble refinancing the
debt. - Naturally, lenders like healthy borrowers, not
troubled borrowers.
42Financial Performance
- Long-term debt or equity are generally used to
finance long-term investments. - Debt financing is more attractive than equity
financing because - Interest payments are deductible for income tax
purposes, but dividends are not deductible. - The ownership rights to voting and profits are
kept by the present shareholders.
43Trading on the Equity
- Capitalization (capital structure) - the total of
a companys long-term financing - Owners equity plus long-term debt
- Trading on the equity (financial leverage,
leveraging) - using borrowed money at fixed
interest rates with the objective of enhancing
the rate of return on common equity
44Trading on the Equity
- There are costs and benefits to the shareholders
from leveraging. - Costs
- Interest payments
- Increased risk
- Benefits
- Larger returns to the common shareholders, as
long as overall income is large enough to cover
the increased interest payments
45Trading on the Equity
- General comments about leveraging
- A debt-free, or unleveraged, company has
identical return on assets (ROA) and return on
equity (ROE). - When a company has a ROA greater than the
interest rate it is paying its lenders, ROE
exceeds ROA. - This is called favorable financial leverage.
- When a company is unable to earn at least the
interest rate on the money borrowed, the return
on equity will be lower than it would be for a
debt-free company. - The more stable the income, the less dangerous it
is to trade on the equity.
46Economic Value Added
- The idea behind economic value added (EVA) is
that a company must earn more than it must pay
for capital if it is to increase in value. - Capital is considered both debt and equity.
- The cost of capital in EVA is a weighted average
of interest cost and the returns required by
equity investors. - If a company has positive EVA, the company is
adding value if a company has negative EVA, the
company is losing value and might be better off
liquidating.
47Income Tax Effects
- If all things are equal, debt financing is less
costly to a corporation than equity financing
because interest payments are deductible for
income tax purposes. - Dividends paid on stock are not deductible.
- Also, dividend rates on stock are generally
higher than interest rates on debt because of the
increased risk associated with stock.
48Income Tax Effects
- General comments on debt financing versus equity
financing - Because interest is deductible for income tax
purposes, net income attributable to common
shareholders can be higher if debt is used
because taxes are lower. - Book net income is higher if equity financing is
used because there are no interest payments to be
deducted as expenses. - Failure to pay interest is an act of bankruptcy,
which gives creditors the right to control the
company failure to pay dividends has less severe
consequences.
49Measuring Safety
- Investors in debt securities want assurance that
the company in which they have invested will be
able to make the scheduled interest and principal
payments. - These investors want to avoid the trouble of
recovering their investments through bankruptcy
of the company. - They would much rather a steady stream of income
from a healthy company.
50Measuring Safety
- Interest coverage (times interest earned) - a
ratio that focuses on the interest-paying ability
of a company
51Measuring Safety
- A rule of thumb for debt investors is that the
interest coverage should be at least five
times even in the poorest year in a
span of 7 to 10 years. - The tax deductibility feature of interest is a
major reason why debt financing is used more than
equity financing using preferred stock.
52Prominence of Earnings Per Share
- Earnings per share is a basic reporting element
in the financial statements. - Some issues tend to complicate the calculation of
earnings per share. - Use of a weighted-average number
of shares of common stock - Outstanding shares of nonconvertible
preferred stock - Changes in capitalization structure such as stock
splits and stock dividends
53Weighted-Average Shares and Preferred Stock
- If all shares outstanding are common shares, the
biggest complication is the use of a
weighted-average number of shares of common
stock. - The following formula is used in this case.
Earning per share of common stock
54Weighted-Average Sharesand Preferred Stock
- Earnings per share is calculated as net income
divided by weighted-average number of shares
outstanding during the period. - The weighted-average number of shares is based on
the number of months that the shares were
outstanding during the year.
55Weighted-Average Sharesand Preferred Stock
- Online, Inc., has 750,000 shares of common stock
outstanding at the beginning of the calendar
year, and 200,000 additional shares were issued
on October 1. What is the weighted-average
number of shares outstanding during the year?
56Weighted-Average Sharesand Preferred Stock
- The weighted-average number of shares is
computed as follows - 750,000 x weighting of 12/12 750,000
- 200,000 x weighting of 3/12 50,000
- 800,000
-
- OR
- 750,000 x 9/12 562,500
- 950,000 x 3/12
237,500 - 800,000
-
57Weighted-Average Sharesand Preferred Stock
- Another complication arises if there are shares
of nonconvertible preferred stock outstanding. - The dividends on preferred stock for the current
period, whether or not paid, should be deducted
in calculating EPS because those dividends are
not available to be paid to common shareholders.
Earning per share of common stock
58Basic and Diluted EPS
- When a company has convertible securities, stock
options outstanding, or other financial
instruments that can be converted to common
shares, the calculation of EPS becomes even more
complicated. - When convertible securities exist, EPS is
calculated using the assumption that any and all
convertible shares are turned into common stock
at the beginning of the period.
59Basic and Diluted EPS
- The presence of convertible securities increases
the number of common shares to the highest
possible number considering the convertible
securities and stock options outstanding. - If the number or shares outstanding is increased,
earnings per share is decreased. - These convertible securities are said to dilute
(reduce) earnings per share.
60Disclosure of Nonrecurring Items
- Financial statement analysis focuses on normal
recurring items of the financial statements, not
nonrecurring items. - Four major categories of nonrecurring items
- Special items
- Extraordinary items
- Discontinued operations
- Accounting changes
61Special Items
- Special items - expenses that are large enough
and unusual enough to warrant separate disclosure - Companies generally have flexibility in deciding
when to treat something as a special item. - Special items appear as separate line items among
operating expenses on the income statement. - Any necessary discussion must be included in the
footnotes to the financial statements.
62Extraordinary Items
- Extraordinary items - items that are unusual in
nature and infrequent in occurrence that are
shown separately, net of tax, in the income
statement - Unusual in nature means that an item is different
from the typical or normal operating activities
of a business. - Infrequent in occurrence means that an event
should not be expected to recur often.
63Extraordinary Items
- Examples of extraordinary items are the financial
effects of natural disasters such as earthquakes
or hurricanes and government expropriations. - Whether an item is extraordinary sometimes
depends on where the event occurs. - For example, losses from damage resulting from a
hurricane on the coast of Louisiana would not be
considered extraordinary, but losses from damage
resulting from a hurricane in South Dakota would
be extraordinary.
64Extraordinary Items
- Extraordinary items must be shown separately on
the income statement. - They must also be shown net of tax, which means
that the amount on the income
statement includes any tax effect
the item might have.
65Discontinued Operations
- Discontinued operations - the termination
(closing or sale) of a business segment reported
separately, net of tax, in the income statement - Any gain or loss from the actual disposal of the
segment must be disclosed along with
the results of operations (income or
loss) for that segment
during the period
before the disposal.
66Accounting Changes
- Accounting changes occur when the FASB requires a
new way of accounting for a particular item. - When the FASB changes its rules, it often
requires a major one-time recognition (revenue or
expense). - Accounting changes are shown separately and are
shown net of tax.
67Accounting Changes
- The presentation of nonrecurring items on the
income statement is as follows - Income from continuing operations before income
taxes - Deduct income taxes
- Income from continuing operations
- Discontinued operations, net of tax
- Income before extraordinary items
- Extraordinary items, net of tax
- Income before cumulative effect of an
accounting change - Cumulative effect of an accounting change,
net of tax - Net income
68International Considerations
- Financial statement analysis may be complicated
by several factors when companies carry on
operations in different countries. - Differences in accounting methods
- Language in which the results are reported
- Currency in which results are reported
- Different securities markets, tax structures,
and local customs
69Price-Earnings Ratios and Growth
- The P-E ratio is helpful for relating the price
of a stock to the earnings it is generating. - Value investors look for stocks with low P-E
ratios because they feel these stocks are
undervalued. - Growth investors feel that stocks with high P-E
ratios are likely to be high growth stocks. - The price is high because investors see strong
growth ahead.
70Price-Earnings Ratios and Growth
- One way to relate P-E ratios to growth is the
price-earnings growth (PEG) ratio. - It is a tool to help focus attention on certain
stocks and to help moderate knee-jerk reactions
to other ratios.
P-E ratio
Price-earnings growth ratio
Earnings growth rate
71Relating Cash Flowand Net Income
- Four possible combinations of net income and cash
flows exists. - Relationship 1 2 3 4
- Cash flow from operations
- Net income
72Relating Cash Flowand Net Income
- Four possible situations
- Situation 1 confirms the profitability of the
company. - Situation 2 can occur where a company has large
noncash expenses such as depreciation. - Situation 3 is often an indication of trouble but
may also be an indication of a rapidly growing
company. - Situation 4 confirms the lack of profitability of
the company.
73Introduction to Financial Accounting8th
EditionPowerPoint Presentation
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