The Basics
If you can read a nutrition label or a baseball box score, you can learn to read
basic financial statements. If you can follow a recipe or apply for a loan, you
can learn basic accounting. The basics aren’t difficult and they aren’t rocket science.
This brochure is designed to help you gain a basic understanding of how to read
financial statements. Just as a CPR class teaches you how to perform the basics
of cardiac pulmonary resuscitation, this brochure will explain how to read the basic
parts of a financial statement. It will not train you to be an accountant (just
as a CPR course will not make you a cardiac doctor), but it should give you the
confidence to be able to look at a set of financial statements and make sense of
them.
Let’s begin by looking at what financial statements do.
“Show me the money!”
We all remember Cuba Gooding Jr.’s immortal line from the movie Jerry Maguire,
“Show me the money!” Well, that’s what financial statements do. They show you the
money. They show you where a company’s money came from, where it went, and where
it is now.
There are four main financial statements. They are: (1) balance sheets; (2) income
statements; (3) cash flow statements; and (4) statements of shareholders’ equity.
Balance sheets show what a company owns and what it owes at a fixed point in time.
Income statements show how much money a company made and spent over a period of
time. Cash flow statements show the exchange of money between a company and the
outside world also over a period of time. The fourth financial statement, called
a “statement of shareholders’ equity,” shows changes in the interests of the company’s
shareholders over time.
Let’s look at each of the first three financial statements in more detail.
Balance Sheets
A balance sheet provides detailed information about a company’s assets, liabilities
and shareholders’ equity.
Assets are things that a company owns that have value. This typically means
they can either be sold or used by the company to make products or provide services
that can be sold. Assets include physical property, such as plants, trucks, equipment
and inventory. It also includes things that can’t be touched but nevertheless exist
and have value, such as trademarks and patents. And cash itself is an asset. So
are investments a company makes.
Liabilities are amounts of money that a company owes to others. This can
include all kinds of obligations, like money borrowed from a bank to launch a new
product, rent for use of a building, money owed to suppliers for materials, payroll
a company owes to its employees, environmental cleanup costs, or taxes owed to the
government. Liabilities also include obligations to provide goods or services to
customers in the future.
Shareholders’ equity is sometimes called capital or net worth. It’s the money
that would be left if a company sold all of its assets and paid off all of its liabilities.
This leftover money belongs to the shareholders, or the owners, of the company.
|
The following formula summarizes what a balance sheet shows:
ASSETS = LIABILITIES + SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
A company's assets have to equal, or "balance," the sum of its liabilities and shareholders'
equity.
|
A company’s balance sheet is set up like the basic accounting equation shown above.
On the left side of the balance sheet, companies list their assets. On the right
side, they list their liabilities and shareholders’ equity. Sometimes balance sheets
show assets at the top, followed by liabilities, with shareholders’ equity at the
bottom.
Assets are generally listed based on how quickly they will be converted into cash.
Current assets are things a company expects to convert to cash within one
year. A good example is inventory. Most companies expect to sell their inventory
for cash within one year. Noncurrent assets are things a company does not
expect to convert to cash within one year or that would take longer than one year
to sell. Noncurrent assets include fixed assets. Fixed assets are
those assets used to operate the business but that are not available for sale, such
as trucks, office furniture and other property.
Liabilities are generally listed based on their due dates. Liabilities are said
to be either current or long-term. Current liabilities are
obligations a company expects to pay off within the year. Long-term liabilities
are obligations due more than one year away.
Shareholders’ equity is the amount owners invested in the company’s stock plus or
minus the company’s earnings or losses since inception. Sometimes companies distribute
earnings, instead of retaining them. These distributions are called dividends.
A balance sheet shows a snapshot of a company’s assets, liabilities and shareholders’
equity at the end of the reporting period. It does not show the flows into and out
of the accounts during the period.
Income Statements
An income statement is a report that shows how much revenue a company earned over
a specific time period (usually for a year or some portion of a year). An income
statement also shows the costs and expenses associated with earning that revenue.
The literal “bottom line” of the statement usually shows the company’s net earnings
or losses. This tells you how much the company earned or lost over the period.
Income statements also report earnings per share (or “EPS”). This calculation tells
you how much money shareholders would receive if the company decided to distribute
all of the net earnings for the period. (Companies almost never distribute all of
their earnings. Usually they reinvest them in the business.)
To understand how income statements are set up, think of them as a set of stairs.
You start at the top with the total amount of sales made during the accounting period.
Then you go down, one step at a time. At each step, you make a deduction for certain
costs or other operating expenses associated with earning the revenue. At the bottom
of the stairs, after deducting all of the expenses, you learn how much the company
actually earned or lost during the accounting period. People often call this “the
bottom line.”
At the top of the income statement is the total amount of money brought in from
sales of products or services. This top line is often referred to as gross revenues
or sales. It’s called “gross” because expenses have not been deducted from it yet.
So the number is “gross” or unrefined.
The next line is money the company doesn’t expect to collect on certain sales. This
could be due, for example, to sales discounts or merchandise returns.
When you subtract the returns and allowances from the gross revenues, you arrive
at the company’s net revenues. It’s called “net” because, if you can imagine a net,
these revenues are left in the net after the deductions for returns and allowances
have come out.
Moving down the stairs from the net revenue line, there are several lines that represent
various kinds of operating expenses. Although these lines can be reported in various
orders, the next line after net revenues typically shows the costs of the sales.
This number tells you the amount of money the company spent to produce the goods
or services it sold during the accounting period.
The next line subtracts the costs of sales from the net revenues to arrive at a
subtotal called “gross profit” or sometimes “gross margin.” It’s considered “gross”
because there are certain expenses that haven’t been deducted from it yet.
The next section deals with operating expenses. These are expenses that go toward
supporting a company’s operations for a given period – for example, salaries of
administrative personnel and costs of researching new products. Marketing expenses
are another example. Operating expenses are different from “costs of sales,” which
were deducted above, because operating expenses cannot be linked directly to the
production of the products or services being sold.
Depreciation is also deducted from gross profit. Depreciation takes into account
the wear and tear on some assets, such as machinery, tools and furniture, which
are used over the long term. Companies spread the cost of these assets over the
periods they are used. This process of spreading these costs is called depreciation
or amortization. The “charge” for using these assets during the period is a fraction
of the original cost of the assets.
After all operating expenses are deducted from gross profit, you arrive at operating
profit before interest and income tax expenses. This is often called “income from
operations.”
Next companies must account for interest income and interest expense. Interest income
is the money companies make from keeping their cash in interest-bearing savings
accounts, money market funds and the like. On the other hand, interest expense is
the money companies paid in interest for money they borrow. Some income statements
show interest income and interest expense separately. Some income statements combine
the two numbers. The interest income and expense are then added or subtracted from
the operating profits to arrive at operating profit before income tax.
Finally, income tax is deducted and you arrive at the bottom line: net profit or
net losses. (Net profit is also called net income or net earnings.) This tells you
how much the company actually earned or lost during the accounting period. Did the
company make a profit or did it lose money?
Earnings Per Share or EPS
Most income statements include a calculation of earnings per share or EPS. This
calculation tells you how much money shareholders would receive for each share of
stock they own if the company distributed all of its net income for the period.
To calculate EPS, you take the total net income and divide it by the number of outstanding
shares of the company.
Cash Flow Statements
Cash flow statements report a company’s inflows and outflows of cash. This is important
because a company needs to have enough cash on hand to pay its expenses and purchase
assets. While an income statement can tell you whether a company made a profit,
a cash flow statement can tell you whether the company generated cash.
A cash flow statement shows changes over time rather than absolute dollar amounts
at a point in time. It uses and reorders the information from a company’s balance
sheet and income statement.
The bottom line of the cash flow statement shows the net increase or decrease in
cash for the period. Generally, cash flow statements are divided into three main
parts. Each part reviews the cash flow from one of three types of activities: (1)
operating activities; (2) investing activities; and (3) financing activities.
Operating Activities
The first part of a cash flow statement analyzes a company’s cash flow from net
income or losses. For most companies, this section of the cash flow statement reconciles
the net income (as shown on the income statement) to the actual cash the company
received from or used in its operating activities. To do this, it adjusts net income
for any non-cash items (such as adding back depreciation expenses) and adjusts for
any cash that was used or provided by other operating assets and liabilities.
Investing Activities
The second part of a cash flow statement shows the cash flow from all investing
activities, which generally include purchases or sales of long-term assets, such
as property, plant and equipment, as well as investment securities. If a company
buys a piece of machinery, the cash flow statement would reflect this activity as
a cash outflow from investing activities because it used cash. If the company decided
to sell off some investments from an investment portfolio, the proceeds from the
sales would show up as a cash inflow from investing activities because it provided
cash.
Financing Activities
The third part of a cash flow statement shows the cash flow from all financing activities.
Typical sources of cash flow include cash raised by selling stocks and bonds or
borrowing from banks. Likewise, paying back a bank loan would show up as a use of
cash flow.
Read the Footnotes
A horse called “Read The Footnotes” ran in the 2004 Kentucky Derby. He finished
seventh, but if he had won, it would have been a victory for financial literacy
proponents everywhere. It’s so important to read the footnotes. The footnotes
to financial statements are packed with information. Here are some of the highlights:
- Significant accounting policies and practices – Companies are required to
disclose the accounting policies that are most important to the portrayal of the
company’s financial condition and results. These often require management’s most
difficult, subjective or complex judgments.
- Income taxes – The footnotes provide detailed information about the company’s
current and deferred income taxes. The information is broken down by level – federal,
state, local and/or foreign, and the main items that affect the company’s effective
tax rate are described.
- Pension plans and other retirement programs – The footnotes discuss the company’s
pension plans and other retirement or post-employment benefit programs. The notes
contain specific information about the assets and costs of these programs, and indicate
whether and by how much the plans are over- or under-funded.
- Stock options – The notes also contain information about stock options granted
to officers and employees, including the method of accounting for stock-based compensation
and the effect of the method on reported results.
Read the MD&A
You can find a narrative explanation of a company’s financial performance in a section
of the quarterly or annual report entitled, “Management’s Discussion and Analysis
of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.” MD&A is management’s
opportunity to provide investors with its view of the financial performance and
condition of the company. It’s management’s opportunity to tell investors what the
financial statements show and do not show, as well as important trends and risks
that have shaped the past or are reasonably likely to shape the company’s future.
The SEC’s rules governing MD&A require disclosure about trends, events or uncertainties
known to management that would have a material impact on reported financial information.
The purpose of MD&A is to provide investors with information that the company’s
management believes to be necessary to an understanding of its financial condition,
changes in financial condition and results of operations. It is intended to help
investors to see the company through the eyes of management. It is also intended
to provide context for the financial statements and information about the company’s
earnings and cash flows.
Financial Statement Ratios and Calculations
You’ve probably heard people banter around phrases like “P/E ratio,” “current ratio”
and “operating margin.” But what do these terms mean and why don’t they show up
on financial statements? Listed below are just some of the many ratios that investors
calculate from information on financial statements and then use to evaluate a company.
As a general rule, desirable ratios vary by industry.
- Debt-to-equity ratio compares a company’s total debt to shareholders’ equity.
Both of these numbers can be found on a company’s balance sheet. To calculate debt-to-equity
ratio, you divide a company’s total liabilities by its shareholder equity, or
Debt-to-Equity Ratio = Total Liabilities / Shareholders’ Equity
If a company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 2 to 1, it means that the company has
two dollars of debt to every one dollar shareholders invest in the company. In other
words, the company is taking on debt at twice the rate that its owners are investing
in the company.
- Inventory turnover ratio compares a company’s cost of sales on its income
statement with its average inventory balance for the period. To calculate the average
inventory balance for the period, look at the inventory numbers listed on the balance
sheet. Take the balance listed for the period of the report and add it to the balance
listed for the previous comparable period, and then divide by two. (Remember that
balance sheets are snapshots in time. So the inventory balance for the previous
period is the beginning balance for the current period, and the inventory balance
for the current period is the ending balance.) To calculate the inventory turnover
ratio, you divide a company’s cost of sales (just below the net revenues on the
income statement) by the average inventory for the period, or
Inventory Turnover Ratio = Cost of Sales / Average Inventory for the Period
If a company has an inventory turnover ratio of 2 to 1, it means that the company’s
inventory turned over twice in the reporting period.
- Operating margin compares a company’s operating income to net revenues. Both
of these numbers can be found on a company’s income statement. To calculate operating
margin, you divide a company’s income from operations (before interest and income
tax expenses) by its net revenues, or
Operating Margin = Income from Operations / Net Revenues
Operating margin is usually expressed as a percentage. It shows, for each dollar
of sales, what percentage was profit.
- P/E ratio compares a company’s common stock price with its earnings per share.
To calculate a company’s P/E ratio, you divide a company’s stock price by its earnings
per share, or
P/E Ratio = Price per share / Earnings per share
If a company’s stock is selling at $20 per share and the company is earning $2 per
share, then the company’s P/E Ratio is 10 to 1. The company’s stock is selling at
10 times its earnings.
- Working capital is the money leftover if a company paid its current liabilities
(that is, its debts due within one-year of the date of the balance sheet) from its
current assets.
Working Capital = Current Assets – Current Liabilities
Bringing It All Together
Although this brochure discusses each financial statement separately, keep in mind
that they are all related. The changes in assets and liabilities that you see on
the balance sheet are also reflected in the revenues and expenses that you see on
the income statement, which result in the company’s gains or losses. Cash flows
provide more information about cash assets listed on a balance sheet and are related,
but not equivalent, to net income shown on the income statement. And so on. No one
financial statement tells the complete story. But combined, they provide very powerful
information for investors. And information is the investor’s best tool when it comes
to investing wisely.
|