Financial Statement Analysis PDF
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Uploaded by ProfuseNirvana
UCSC
Martina Marazzi
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Summary
This document provides an introduction to performing financial statement analysis focusing on horizontal analysis. It explains how to calculate percentage changes over time, using examples from Nestlé. It emphasizes the importance of considering both quantum and percentage changes when reviewing financial data, with a focus on evaluating financial position and trends.
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lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi Preparaon of Cash Flow Statement - direct method We have already seen the preparaon of the Cash Flow Statement according to the direct method, but there is another way to work with the direct method an...
lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi Preparaon of Cash Flow Statement - direct method We have already seen the preparaon of the Cash Flow Statement according to the direct method, but there is another way to work with the direct method and there is a dierence because, suppose that we don’t have the imput of the cash account, could we sll be able, with one Income Statement and two Balance Sheets, to work out the direct cash collecon from customers, payments to suppliers and payments of addional expenses? The answer is yes, but how? The idea is to start with the Income Statement and curve out from the Income Statement Cash Reeceipts from Customers and Cash Payments to Suppliers. Cash ows from operaons are comprised of four items: Cash receipts from customers Sales of current period + beginning period Accounts Receivable Cash potenally collecble during the year - end of period Accounts Receivable Cash receipts from customers Cash disbursements to suppliers Purchases + beginning period Accounts Payable Cash potenally payable during the year - end of period Accounts Payable Cash disbursements to suppliers Cash disbursements on operang expenses General expenses - beginning period Prepaid-Expenses + beginning period Expenses Payable Cash potenally payable during the year + ending Prepaid Expenses - ending Expenses Payable Cash disbursements on operang expenses Cash disbursements to tax authority Property Taxes + beginning period Property Taxes Payable Cash potenally payable during the year - end of period Property Taxes Payable Cash disbursements to tax authority 20 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected]) lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS Perform basic (horizontal and vercal) analysis of nancial statements – Horizontal Analysis The study of percentage changes from year to year is called horizontal analysis. Compung a percentage change takes two steps: • Compute amount of change from one period (base period) to the next • Divide the amount of change by the base-period amount Illustraon: Nestlé Nestlé’s sales increased by 0.77% during 2016, and operang prot increased by 6.08%, in 2016, computed as follows: Nestlé’s net sales increased by 0.77% during 2016, computed as follows: Step 1: Compute amount change 2016 2015 CHF 89,469 CHF 88,785 = Increase CHF 684 Step 2: Divide change by base-period amount Let’s apply this to Nestlé’s sales and operang prot for the year 2016 and 2015 (CHF 89,469 compared to CHF 88,785, and CHF 13,163 compared to CHF 12,408, respecvely). For sales, the amount change is an increase of CHF 684, and for operang prot, an increase of CHF 755. Expressed as percentages, they represent an increase of 0.77% in sales and an increase of 6.08% in operang prot. As we can see, the percentages give a beer context than just the actual sales or actual operang prots. If we extend this horizontal analysis to Nestlé’s Income Statement, we will see something like this below: 21 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected]) lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi Horizontal analysis does not provide you with answers as to why other income increases by 122.06% and other expenses decreases by 12.64%. We will need to carefully study the notes to the nancial statements and make an assessment if these 2016 amounts are likely to repeat in the years beyond. We would want to check if there are likely to be changes in the income from associates and joint ventures and also the reasons why the tax expenses vary so much from 2015 to 2016. As an investor, we would want to assess if these items are likely to have a further impact in future operaons. Horizontal analysis provides that rst step in seeing how the numbers move from one year to the next. Similarly, studying changes in Balance Sheet accounts can also enhance our understanding of the current and long-term nancial posion of the enty. From total assets perspecve, we can see that Nestlé has grown 6.38%, from CHF 123,992 to CHF 131,901, as a result of increases in both current assets and non-current assets. In parcular, cash has the biggest percentage increase of 63.60%. Short-term borrowings increased by 25.85%, accompanied by a decrease in long-term borrowings of 4.40%. Note that the largest decrease in quantum is retained earnings (CHF 5,144), but percentage wise, it has only dropped by 5.84%. This is why we will need to balance our review of horizontal analysis between the quantum and percentage since a large base may result in a smaller percentage change, and similarly, a small base may result in a very big percentage change. A word of cauon: we should not show a percentage change when the numbers swing from negave to posive or vice versa. In such cases, while we can mathemacally calculate the percentage dierence, they are not meaningful and not shown. For these instances, we should put the notaon “n.m.” to stand for not meaningful. Trend Analysis Trend percentages are a form of horizontal analysis. Trends indicate the direcon a business is taking. Trend percentages are computed by selecng a base year whose amounts are set equal to 100%. The amount for each following year is stated as a percentage of the base amount. To compute a trend percentage, divide an item for a later year by the base-year amount: Remember that income from operaons (or operang prot) is oen viewed as the primary measure of a company’s earnings quality. This is because operang income represents a company’s best predictor of the future net inows from its core business units. Net income from operaons is oen used in esmang the current value of the business. Nestlé’s operang prot for the last 5 years is as follows: 22 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected]) lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi We want to calculate a trend for the ve-year period 2012 through 2016. The rst year in the series (2012) is set as the base year. Trend percentages are computed by dividing each year’s amount by the 2012 amount. The resulng trend percentages follow (2012 = 100%): – Overall, Nestlé’s operang income has been lower than 2012 (the highest in the ve-year series). It dropped to a low of 81% in 2014 but has steadily climbed back to the same level as 2013. You can perform a trend analysis on any item you consider important. Trend analysis using Income Statement data is widely used for predicng the future. Horizontal and trend analyses highlight changes over me. It is a basic technique that will get you started in nancial statement analysis. Vercal Analysis Vercal analysis (or component analysis) shows the relaonship of nancial-statement items relave to a total, which is the 100% gure. All items on the parcular nancial statement are reported as a percentage of the base. • For the Income Statement, total revenue (sales) is usually the base • For the Balance Sheet, total assets is usually the base Prepare common-size nancial statements Common-Size Financial Statements – Report only percentages, no dollar amounts – Assists in comparison of dierent companies using a common denominator Benchmarking – It simply means comparing a company to some standard set by others (usually benchmarks are selected because they direct competors in the same industry or market, peers in the broader market, or just any other “aspiraon” enes) – Goal is improvement – Convert companies’ nancials to common size for easy and more meaningful comparisons Perform nancial rao analysis to make business decisions Financial raos are a major tool of nancial analysis: a rao expresses the relaonship of one number to another. The nancial raos are classied as follows: – Eciency raos 23 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected]) lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi – Financial strength raos – Protability raos – Investment raos Somemes you may nd dierent rao classicaons and even slightly dierent formulas for the raos we are about to discuss. Don’t be alarmed by any dierences; as long as you calculate the raos consistently, there is always value to nancial statement analysis. A weighing scale that is slightly inaccurate can sll tell you which item in a room is the heaviest or lightest. – Eciency Raos For companies that buy or make goods for sale, the ability to sell inventory and collect receivables is crical. In this secon, we discuss a number of raos that measure an enty’s ability to collect cash: • Inventory Turnover Companies generally strive to sell their inventory as quickly as possible: the faster inventory sells, the sooner cash comes in. → Inventory turnover measures the number of mes a company sells its average level of inventory during a year: a fast turnover indicates ease in selling inventory; a low turnover indicates diculty; however a too high a value can mean that the business is not keeping enough inventory on hand, which can lead to lost sales if the company can’t ll orders; therefore, a business strives for the most protable rate of turnover, not necessarily the highest rate → To compute inventory turnover, divide the cost of goods sold by the average inventory for the period (we use the cost of goods sold—not sales—in the computaon because both cost of goods sold and inventory are stated at cost) → Inventory turnover can also be expressed in number of days: this rao is called the inventory resident period (or days supply on hand, days inventory on hand, or something to that eect) • Accounts Receivable Turnover → Receivable turnover measures the ability to collect cash from customers: in general, the higher the rao, the beer (a low receivable turnover indicates ineecveness in collecng dues from customers; however, a receivable turnover that is too high may indicate that credit is too ght, and that may cause you to lose sales to good customers) → To compute accounts receivable turnover, divide net sales by average net accounts receivable: the rao tells how many mes during the year average receivables were turned into cash (note that we would normally exclude non-trading revenue and receivables) → We can also convert receivable turnover into days and refer to it as the receivable collecon period, also known as days sales outstanding, or days sales in receivables, or something similar or Convert average daily sales to DSO • Accounts Payable Turnover 24 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected]) lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi → Businesses buy their supplies and raw materials on credit, and take me to pay their accounts payable (a high account payable turnover rao means a business pays its suppliers very quickly, and a low payable turnover means a longer me period for payments to suppliers: generally, a lower payable turnover is beer than a higher one, as the business is making full use of the credit terms extended by its creditors; however, a business can’t stretch the payable period too far because no one would supply the business if it connued to be delinquent on its payments) → To compute payable turnover, divide cost of goods sold by the average accounts payable for the period. Again, we would only include trade-related payables and exclude items such as interest payable, short-term loan, tax payable, and so forth → We can also convert payables turnover into days and refer to it as the payable outstanding period (or days payable outstanding) • Cash Conversion Cycle → If we put the inventory resident period, receivable collecon period, and payable collecon period together, we can get a rough idea of how long it takes for a business to sell its inventory, collect payments, and make its payments to suppliers: this is what we call the cash conversion cycle → Shows overall liquidity (ideally, it has to be equal to 0 and if it has to be equal to 0, it means that the days that it takes to turn around the inventory, generate the sale, collect the sale and pay the suppliers are basically the same and so the company doesn’t need extra cash to fund these operang cycle – basically the suppliers are funding its operang cycle) → Computes total days it takes to convert inventory to receivables and back to cash, less the days to pay o suppliers • Asset Turnover Rao → Another way to examine eciency would be to assess the amount of resources used to generate sales or revenue (his can be done on a total assets basis, or somemes on a xed assets (i.e., PPE) basis) → This rao is calculated by dividing sales or revenue by average total assets • Rate of Return on Total Assets (ROA) → Measures how protably the company uses its assets – Financial Strength Raos Financial strength raos are indicators of an enty’s abilies to meet its nancial obligaons, either in the short-term or the long-term. Short-term indicators are usually called liquidity raos and long-term ones are usually called solvency raos. • Current Rao The most common rao evaluang current assets and current liabilies is the current rao, which is simply current assets divided by current liabilies. → The current rao measures the ability to pay current liabilies with current assets → In general, a higher current rao indicates a stronger nancial posion • Quick Rao (Acid-Test Rao) 25 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected]) lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi → It tells us whether a business could pass the “acid test” of paying all its current liabilies if they came due immediately → Uses narrower base to measure liquidity than the current rao does → Rate of .90 to 1.00 is acceptable in most industries • Debt Rao This relaonship between total liabilies and total assets is called the debt rao, which gives an indicaon of the degree of leverage or gearing of a company. → The debt rao tells us the proporon of assets nanced with debt → A debt rao of 1 reveals that debt has nanced all the assets → A debt rao of 0.50 means that debt nances half the assets → The higher the debt rao, the greater the pressure to pay interest and principal, the lower the rao, the lower the risk (it can be also expressed as a percentage) • Times-Interest-Earned Rao Analysts use another rao—the mes-interest-earned rao (or interest coverage rao)—to relate income to interest expense (it is supposed to count the number of mes a company covers its interests using its income) → To compute the mes-interest earned rao, divide income from operaons (operang income) by interest expense → It measures the number of mes operang income can cover interest expense and is also called the interest-coverage rao → A high rao indicates ease in paying interest; a low value suggests diculty – Protability raos The fundamental goal of a business is to earn a prot, and so the raos that measure protability are reported widely. Protability raos may be expressed in decimals or percentages. • Gross Prot, Operang Prot, and Net Prot Margin These raos show the percentage of each sales dollar earned as gross, operang, and net prot. If the company does not explicitly have a line on its Income Statement as operang prot (or prot from operaons), we can use earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) as a surrogate for operang prot. → Gross Prot Margin Percentage: it is the amount of prot enty makes from merely selling its products, before other operang costs are subtracted → Operang Prot Margin Percentage: it measures percentage of prot earned from sales in a company’s core business operaon • Return on Total Assets (ROA) → Measures a company’s success in using assets to earn a prot → The numerator is the net prot → The denominator is the average total assets, the sum of beginning and ending balances divided by 2 • Return on Equity (ROE) 26 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected]) lOMoARcPSD|11350337 Financial Statement Analysis and Managerial Accounng UCSC | Marna Marazzi → This rao shows the relaonship between net income and ordinary shareholders’ investment in the company—how much income is earned for every $1 invested by the ordinary equity shareholders → Total return gure divided by the average total equity – Investment raos • Earnings per Ordinary Share (EPS) → Shows the amount of net income earned for each outstanding ordinary share → It is probably the most widely quoted of all nancial stascs and it is the only rao that appears at the boom of the Income Statement and the only nancial rao that has an accounng standard → It is computed by dividing net income available to ordinary shareholders by the weighted-average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the year • Price/Earnings Rao (P/E) → It shows how much an investor is willing to pay for each unit of earnings → It appears in every nancial secon of newspapers and online nancial databases • Dividend Yield → It measures percentage of a share’s market value returned annually to shareholders as dividends *Dividend yields may also be calculated for preference shares. • Book Value per Ordinary Share → Indicates recorded accounng amount for each share of ordinary shares → It is simply ordinary shareholders’ equity divided by the number of ordinary shares outstanding (ordinary equity equals total equity less preference equity) 27 Downloaded by Chiara Davoli ([email protected])