M155LON
Financial Tools and the Legal Environment
Week 1 Financial Statements
Learning Objectives
- Understand the nature, purpose and characteristics of the income statement, the balance sheet, and the statement of cash flows
- Evaluate a company’s financial performance, financial position, and changes in cash flows using the three key financial statements
- Apply cash flow projections to monitor a venture’s cash position
- Understand how pro forma financial statements are developed
- Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP):
- Guidelines that set out the manner and form for presenting accounting information
- International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) & International Accounting Standards (IAS)
- Accounting Methods
- It gives the reader of financial statements a richer and more complete depiction of the business’s financial condition.
- It helps them achieve increases in revenue and profit. Some owners could get too aggressive and sometimes even act unethically with regard to growth.
- The cash accounting method gives the reader a more limited picture of the company’s financial condition.
- Private-practice physicians, whose revenues come from slow third-party payers, e.g. insurance companies and the government.
- The cash method helps delay revenue recognition until the cash is actually received, reducing the company’s profit before taxes and consequently the taxes.
- Using the cash method does not result in tax avoidance/elimination. It simply delays tax payments into future years.
- It records the flow of resources over time by stating the financial condition of a business over the course of a period, usually a month, quarter, or year.
- It shows the revenues (i.e., sales) achieved by a company during a particular period and the expenses (i.e., costs) associated with generating these revenues.
- Earnings – net income or profit
- Interest expense – the cost of debt
- Taxes – the payments to the government based on a company’s profit
- Depreciation – noncash expenditures for the decline in value of tangible assets
- Amortization – noncash expenditures for the decline in value of intangible assets such as patents or goodwill
- It is a financial snapshot of a company’s assets, liabilities and shareholder’s equity at a particular time.
- Bankers rely on the analysis of ratios of various assets and liabilities on the balance sheet to determine a company’s creditworthiness and solvency position.
- A measure of the company’s ability to pay its bills, i.e. the company’s short-term financial strength.
- Two companies have the exact same level of working capital does not mean that they have equal short-term financial strength. A company with greater working capital than another is not necessarily financially stronger.
- A banker would prefer to lend to a company that has greater financial strength.
- How can we tell which company has greater financial strength?
- Uses information from the two other financial statements
- Develops a statement that explains changes in cash flows resulting from operating and financing activities.
- Entrepreneurs should develop pro forma financial statements for all new entrepreneurial opportunities, including either start-ups or existing companies that are being purchased.
- Any pro forma should have figures for at least 3 years and 3 scenarios—a bestcase, a worst-case, and a most-likely-case scenario.
- A company’s historical performance drives the financial projections for that company’s future unless other information indicates that past performance is not a good indicator.
- Conduct an industry analysis and select a company within the same industry that can be used as a comparable.
- Use secured sales commitments to calculate the worst-case scenario. Use larger amounts to calculate the best-case and most-likely-case scenarios.
- Market research can be undertaken to determine the overall market demand for this new product or service.
- Use specific figures for projections, based on your own assumptions or expectations.