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Pro Forma Financial Statements

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Title: Pro Forma Financial Statements


1
Pro Forma Financial Statements
2
Pro Forma Financial Statements
  • Projected or future financial statements.
  • Pro forma income statements, balance sheets, and
    the resulting cash flow statements are the
    building blocks of financial planning.
  • They are also vital for any valuation exercises
    one might do in investment or MA planning.

3
Generic Forms Income Statement
  • Sales (or revenue)
  • Less Cost of Goods Sold
  • Equals Gross Income (or Gross Earnings)
  • Less Operating Expenses
  • Equals Operating Income
  • Less Depreciation
  • Equals EBIT
  • Less Interest Expense
  • Equals EBT
  • Less Taxes
  • Equals Net Income (EAT)

4
Generic Forms Balance Sheet
  • Assets
  • Cash
  • Accounts Receivable
  • Inventory
  • Marketable Securities
  • Total Current Assets
  • Gross PPE
  • Accumulated Depreciation
  • Net PPE
  • Land
  • Total Assets
  • Liabilities Equity
  • Bank Loan
  • Accounts Payable
  • Wages Payable
  • Taxes Payable
  • Current Portion L-T Debt
  • Total Current Liabilities
  • Long-Term Debt
  • Preferred Stock
  • Common Stock
  • Retained Earnings
  • Total Liabilities Equity

5
Generic Forms Bridge
  • Clearly we cant hope to get anywhere if we treat
    these forecasts as being separate. The income
    statement records the effect of a given year
    while the balance sheets show the situation at
    the beginning of and after that year.
  • One important bridge is
  • Net Income less Dividends Change in Retained
    Earnings
  • This simple relation and interest expense will
    tie them together.

6
Bridge?
Income Statement
Balance Sheet
Sales (or revenue) Less COGS Equals Gross Income Less Operating Exp Less Depr Equals EBIT Less Interest Exp Equals EBT Less Taxes Equals Net Inc (EAT) Less Dividends Changes in Retained E Assets Cash Accts Rec Inventory Total Current Assets Gross PPE Accumulated Depr Net PPE Land Total Assets Liabilities Owners E Bank Loan Accts Pay Wages Pay Taxes Pay Total Current Liab L-T Debt Common Stock Retained Earnings Total Liab OE
7
Overview of the Process
  • The most common way to proceed is to fill in the
    income statement first. The standard approach is
    called percent of sales forecasting.
  • Because you first get the sales or sales growth
    forecast.
  • Then, project variables having a stable relation
    to sales using forecasted sales and estimated
    ratios.
  • COGS, Inventory, Operating expenses (may)
  • DA, Interest expense (wont), Taxes (will be
    predictable from EBT)
  • Require estimates of the components of expenses
    that dont vary directly (and in a stable way)
    with sales to complete the income statement.

8
Overview of the Process
  • From the completed income statement, determine
    the change in retained earnings, transfer it to
    the balance sheet.
  • Some of the current assets and liabilities
    (accounts receivable, accounts payable,
    inventory, wages payable, etc.) can be expected
    to vary directly with sales.
  • Cash is usually determined by a policy decision
    via some inventory (of liquidity) model.
  • Gross PPE changes are usually the result of
    policy decisions as are changes in preferred or
    common stock or long-term debt.
  • Often the bank loan or long-term debt is used as
    a residual to determine the required new
    financing (make it balance).

9
Overview of the Process
  • Interest expense comes from the amount of
    interest bearing (Long-term) debt.
  • Interest expense effects net income,
  • Which effects changes in retained earnings,
  • Which, through the equality requirement for the
    balance sheet, effects the amount of interest
    bearing debt that is necessary.
  • Thus these two statements are intimately
    connected.

10
Circularity
Sales (or revenue) Less COGS Equals Gross Income Less Operating Exp Less Depr Equals EBIT Less Interest Exp Equals EBT Less Taxes Equals Net Inc (EAT) Less Dividends Changes in Retained E Assets Cash Accts Rec Inventory Total Current Assets Gross PPE Accumulated Depr Net PPE Land Total Assets Liabilities Owners E Bank Loan Accts Pay Wages Pay Taxes Pay Total Current Liab L-T Debt Common Stock Retained Earnings Total Liab OE
11
Interactions
  • The income statement equation can be written
  • Rev Operating Exp DeprAmort
  • - (Int Bearing Debt)(Int Rate)(1- Tax Rate)
  • - Dividends Change in retained earnings
  • The balance sheet equation is
  • Total Assets Accts Pay Wages Pay Taxes Pay
  • Int Bearing Debt Common Stock Change in
    retained earnings
  • Interest bearing debt is the unknown in each
    equation.
  • If we just substitute the LHS of the income
    statement equation for the last term of the
    balance sheet equation we can solve them
    simultaneously to find the external debt
    financing required.
  • This is made easy by spread sheets and should be
    easier to understand by looking at the following
    example.

12
Example
13
Sustainable Growth Rate
  • Life cycle Growth, Maturity, Decline
  • During the growth phase most firms will require
    large amounts of outside capital to sustain the
    growth as internal funds cannot keep up with the
    required added investment in NWC and fixed
    assets.
  • In the middle phase, firms may find that
    internally generated cash is sufficient to fund
    required investments.
  • In the declining phase, investment is very low
    and firms are generally looking for ways to
    return capital to owners or to invest in new
    directions.
  • Sustainable growth rate is a concept used in
    understanding what growth rate can be sustained,
    if the firm doesnt sell new equity, without
    relying excessively on debt financing.
  • A firm with sales growth beyond its SGR that
    doesnt sell new equity must borrow. If the
    period of growth is extended, obviously the use
    of debt will be excessive.

14
SGR Equation
  • SGR Profit Margin Asset Turnover
    Beginning Financial Leverage Retention
    Ratio
  • This is ROE times the retention ratio except that
    we need to use the beginning of period equity
    level in calculating the financial leverage.

15
Example
  • Suppose a firm has an ROE of 15, a retention
    ratio of 100, and has established a target
    debt/equity ratio of 0.50. This firms SGR is
    15.
  • For such a firm 1 of net income becomes an
    increase in equity of 1. This increase in
    equity can support an increase in debt of 0.50
    or a total growth in assets of 1.50.
  • Suppose an identical firm has a payout ratio of
    0.50. This firms SGR is 7.5.
  • For the second firm 1 in net income becomes
    0.50 in increased equity that can support 0.25
    in new debt or only 0.75 growth in assets.
  • If this second firms sales grow at 15 (rather
    than 7.5) then unless it can improve its profit
    margin or asset turnover it will have to violate
    its D/E target. Eventually, this will become
    dangerous.
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