Title: (2) Statement of Cash Flows
1(2) Statement of Cash Flows
2The Function of the CF Statement
- The Statement of cash flows shows
- Where did the company obtain its cash
- 2. How did the company spend its cash
- 3. Why the cash balance changed from the
beginning to the end of the accounting period.
3Cash and Cash Equivalents
- Statement of Cash Flows includes
- Cash
- Cash equivalents
- Money market accounts
- Commercial paper
- Treasury bills
Excerpt from IBM 2008 Annual Report
4Statement of Cash Flows
Operating Activities
Investing Activities
Financing Activities
CASH INFLOWS
5Statement of Cash Flows
Cash Inflows
CASH OUTFLOWS
Investing Activities
Financing Activities
Operating Activities
6Classification of Cash Flows
- The statement of cash flows classifies cash
receipts and cash payments into three major
categories
7The Format of CF Statement
8Operating Activities (CF from ongoing operations)
- Involve the cash inflows and outflows from
activities that enter into the determination of
net income
- Cash Inflows
- Receipts from sale of goods and services
- Receipts from sale of trading securities
- Interest and dividends
- Cash Outflows
- Payments for wages, inventory, expenses,
interest, and taxes - Payments for purchase of trading securities
9Investing Activities (CF from buying/selling
generally non-current assets)
- Involve the acquisition and sale of property,
plant, and equipment and other long-term assets,
including long-term investments and the making
and collecting of loans
- Cash Inflows
- Receipts from selling plant assets
- Receipts from selling marketable securities and
long-term investments - Collections on loans
- Cash Outflows
- Expenditures on purchases of plant assets
- Expenditures on purchases of securities and
long-term investments - Cash lent to borrowers
10Financing Activities (CF from Dealing with the
providers of capital)
- Obtaining resources from stockholders and
providing them with a return on their
investments, and obtaining resources from
creditors and repaying the amounts borrowed
(settling the obligations)
- Cash Inflows
- Proceeds from stock issues and from short- and
long-term borrowing - Sales of treasury stock
- Cash Outflows
- Repayments of loans (excluding interest)
- Payments to owners, including cash dividends
- Purchases of treasury stock
11Classification of Cash Inflows and Cash Outflows
12Noncash Investing and Financing Transactions
- Significant transactions that involve only
long-term assets, long-term liabilities, or
stockholders equity
- Noncash examples
- Exchange of long-term asset for a long-term
liability - Settle a debt by issuing capital stock
- Take out a long-term mortgage to purchase real
estate
13Components of CF Statement
1
Indirect method begins with net income and
ends with cash flows from operating activities
- Operating Activities section
2
Cash transactions involving capital
expenditures and loans
Investing Activities section
3
Financing Activities section
Debt, stock, dividend, and treasury stock
transactions
4
Reconciliation of beginning and ending balances
of cash
Ties to cash balances of the balance sheets
14Determining Cash Flowsfrom Operating Activities
- The direct method
- Adjusts each item on the income statement to its
cash equivalent - More easily understood by the average reader
- The indirect method
- Lists only necessary adjustments to convert net
income to net cash flows - Superior from an analysts perspective
- Used by most companies
- Both methods produce the same net figure
15Indirect Method Adjustments to Net Income
Cash Income
Cash Expenses
Cash Revenue
Collections
_
Payments
_
Accrued Revenue
Accrued Expenses
Accrued Income