Title: Working With Financial Statements
1Working With Financial Statements
2Key Concepts and Skills
- Understand sources and uses of cash and the
Statement of Cash Flows - Know how to standardize financial statements for
comparison purposes - Know how to compute and interpret important
financial ratios - Be able to compute and interpret the Du Pont
Identity - Understand the problems and pitfalls in financial
statement analysis
3Chapter Outline
- Cash Flow and Financial Statements A Closer Look
- Standardized Financial Statements
- Ratio Analysis
- The Du Pont Identity
- Using Financial Statement Information
4Sample Balance Sheet
Numbers in thousands
5Sample Income Statement
Numbers in thousands, except EPS DPS
6Sources and Uses
- Sources
- Cash inflow occurs when we sell something
- Decrease in asset account
- Cash equivalents is the only source
- Increase in liability or equity account
- Everything except accounts payable is a direct
source - Uses
- Cash outflow occurs when we buy something
- Increase in asset account
- Everything except cash equivalents is a use
- Decrease in liability or equity account
7Statement of Cash Flows
- Statement that summarizes the sources and uses of
cash - Changes divided into three major categories
- Operating Activity includes net income and
changes in most current accounts - Investment Activity includes changes in fixed
assets - Financing Activity includes changes in notes
payable, long-term debt and equity accounts as
well as dividends
8Sample Statement of Cash Flows
Numbers in thousands
9Standardized Financial Statements
- Common-Size Balance Sheets
- Compute all accounts as a percent of total assets
- Common-Size Income Statements
- Compute all line items as a percent of sales
- Standardized statements make it easier to compare
financial information, particularly as the
company grows - They are also useful for comparing companies of
different sizes, particularly within the same
industry. They are widely used.
10Ratio Analysis
- Ratios also allow for better comparison through
time or between companies - As we look at each ratio, ask yourself what the
ratio is trying to measure and why is that
information important - Ratios are used both internally and externally
11Things to Consider When Using Financial Ratios
- What aspect of the firm or its operations are we
attempting to analyze? - Firm performance can be measured along
dimensions - What goes into a particular ratio?
- Historical cost? Market values? Accounting
conventions? - What is the unit of measurement?
- Dollars? Days? Turns?
- What would a desirable ratio value be? What is
the benchmark? - Time-series analysis? Cross-sectional analysis?
12Categories of Financial Ratios
- Short-term solvency or liquidity ratios
- Long-term solvency or financial leverage ratios
- Asset management or turnover ratios
- Profitability ratios
- Market value ratios
- Economic Value Added (EVA)
13Computing Liquidity Ratios
- Current Ratio CA / CL
- 1,801,690 / 1,780,785 1.01 times
- Quick Ratio (CA Inventory) / CL
- (1,801,690 314,454) / 1,780,785 .835 times
- Cash Ratio Cash / CL
- 3,171 / 1,780,785 .002 times
14Computing Long-term Solvency Ratios
- Total Debt Ratio (TA TE) / TA
- (4,931,444 1,761,044) / 4,931,444 .6429 times
or 64.29 - The firm finances a little over 64 of its assets
with debt. - Debt/Equity TD / TE
- (4,931,444 1,761,044) / 1, 761,044 1.800
times - Equity Multiplier TA / TE 1 D/E
- 1 1.800 2.800
15Computing Coverage Ratios
- Times Interest Earned EBIT / Interest
- 820,183 / 52,841 15.5 times
- Cash Coverage (EBIT Depreciation) / Interest
- (820,183 362,325) / 52,841 22.38 times
16Computing Inventory Ratios
- Inventory Turnover Cost of Goods Sold /
Inventory - 1,762,721 / 388,947 4.53 times
- Days Sales in Inventory 365 / Inventory
Turnover - 365 / 4.53 81 days
17Computing Receivables Ratios
- Receivables Turnover Sales / Accounts
Receivable - 4,335,491 / 1,095,118 3.96 times
- Days Sales in Receivables 365 / Receivables
Turnover - 365 / 3.96 92 days
18Computing Total Asset Turnover
- Total Asset Turnover Sales / Total Assets
- 4,335,491 / 4,931,444 .88 times
- Measure of asset use efficiency
- Not unusual for TAT lt 1, especially if a firm has
a large amount of fixed assets
19Computing Profitability Measures
- Profit Margin Net Income / Sales
- 471,916 / 4,335,491 .1088 times or 10.88
- Return on Assets (ROA) Net Income / Total
Assets - 471,916 / 4,931,444 . 0957 times or 9.57
- Return on Equity (ROE) Net Income / Total
Equity - 471,916 / 1,761,044 .2680 times or 26.8
20Computing Market Value Measures
- Market Price 60.98 per share
- Shares outstanding 205,838,910
- PE Ratio Price per share / Earnings per share
- 60.98 / 2.41 25.3 times
- Market-to-book ratio market value per share /
book value per share - 60.98 / (1,761,044,000 / 205,838,910) 7.1 times
21Deriving the Du Pont Identity
- ROE NI / TE
- Multiply by 1 and then rearrange
- ROE (NI / TE) (TA / TA)
- ROE (NI / TA) (TA / TE) ROA EM
- Multiply by 1 again and then rearrange
- ROE (NI / TA) (TA / TE) (Sales / Sales)
- ROE (NI / Sales) (Sales / TA) (TA / TE)
- ROE PM TAT EM
22Using the Du Pont Identity
- ROE PM TAT EM
- Profit margin is a measure of the firms
operating efficiency how well does it control
costs - Total asset turnover is a measure of the firms
asset use efficiency how well does it manage
its assets - Equity multiplier is a measure of the firms
financial leverage
23Why Evaluate Financial Statements?
- Internal uses
- Performance evaluation compensation and
comparison between divisions - Planning for the future guide in estimating
future cash flows - External uses
- Creditors
- Suppliers
- Customers
- Stockholders
24Benchmarking
- Ratios are not very helpful by themselves they
need to be compared to something - Time-Trend Analysis
- Used to see how the firms performance is
changing through time - Internal and external uses
- Peer Group Analysis
- Compare to similar companies or within industries
- SIC and NAICS codes
25Potential Problems
- There is no underlying theory, so there is no way
to know which ratios are most relevant - Benchmarking is difficult for diversified firms
- Globalization and international competition makes
comparison more difficult because of differences
in accounting regulations - Varying accounting procedures, i.e. FIFO vs. LIFO
- Different fiscal years
- Extraordinary events such as 9/11
26Work the Web Example
- The Internet makes ratio analysis much easier
than it has been in the past - But I prefer that you calculate your own ratios