2.3.2- Liquidity Flashcards

1
Q

Balance sheet

A
  • document showing a business’ assets and liabilities
  • snapshot of what a business is worth at a particular time
  • useful for shareholders, suppliers and lenders to judge the financial position of a business
  • also shows the source of funds
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2
Q

Assets

A

Current:

  • short term
  • planned to be turned into cash within the coming year
  • includes inventories and other receivables who owe money to the business

Non Current:

  • long term
  • not expected to be turned into cash within a year
  • intangible assets maybe copyrights, patents and trademarks
  • tangible assets include property, equipment and machinery
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3
Q

Liabilities

A

Current:

  • debts expected to be paid within the next year
  • includes borrowings (short term loans) and overdrafts

Non current:

  • debts not expected to be paid off within a year
  • long term borrowings
  • provision for liabilities is money set aside for future expenses
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4
Q

Equity

A

Money owed to the shareholders of a company

ordinary shares- amount of money paid by shareholders for shares when originally issued

share premium- difference between share price and nominal value

accumulated losses- loses from the previous years trading and decrease the value of equity

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5
Q

Uses of a balance sheet

A
  • evaluate performance of a business
  • evaluate potential of a business to an investor
  • summary of valuation of a business
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6
Q

Limitations of a balance sheet

A
  • value of assets may not be the same as the amount they will sell for
  • intangible may include goodwill, which is hard to value
  • static snapshot. everything may change tomo
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7
Q

Measuring Liquidity

A
  • ability of a business to turn its assets into cash

- cash is the most liquid asset of them all

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8
Q

What does liquidity tell us?

A
  • demonstrates the ability of a firm to pay its debts

- banks, suppliers and investors will all be interested in the liquidity

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9
Q

Current Ratio formula

A

current assets/ current liabilities
-between 1.5:1 and 2:1 = business has plenty of working capital to pay its day-to-day bills
>2:1 = too much money tied up in assets that aren’t making enough money
<1.5:1 = maybe an issue, however retail stores operate at 1:1 as they have fast moving stocks and generate cash from sales

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10
Q

Acid Ratio Formula

A

current assets- stocks/ current liabilities
-harsher test of liquidity because you can’t guarantee to sell all stocks

> 1:1 = business cannot cover it’s current liabilities

some retailers have a strong cash flow and fast moving stocks may have an acid test of 0.4:1

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11
Q

Ways of improving liquidity

A
  • reducing the amount of goods the firm holds, so there is a faster dispatch time to consumers
  • reduce trade credit periods
  • pay suppliers later on agreed credit terms
  • increase long term borrowing to reduce short term borrowing
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12
Q

Working Capital

A
  • funds that a business has to meet its day to day expenses

- formula = current assets- current liabilities

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