Accounting Flashcards
What are the 3 financial statements?
-IS, BS, CFS
IS:
shows a company’s revenue, expenses, and taxes paid over a period and ends with Net Income, which represents the company’s after-tax profits.
BS:
shows the company’s assets - its resources - as well as how it paid for those resources - its liabilities and equity - at a specific point in time. Assets = Liabilities + Equity
CFS: starts with NE, adjusts for non-cash expenses, and changes in working capital. Then it shows the company’s cash from investing and financing activities; the last lines show the net change in cash and the company’s ending balance
Why do we need them?
You need these statements because there is a big difference between a company’s Net Income and the cash it generates – the Income Statement alone doesn’t tell what its cash flow is.
The 3 financial statements let you estimate the “Cash Flow” part, which helps you value the company more accurately.
How do the three statements link together?
To link the statements, make Net Income from the IS the top line of the CFS.
Then adjust this NE number for any non-cash items such as D&A.
Next reflect changes to operational Balance Sheet items, which increase or decrease the company’s cash flow depending on how they’ve changed.
This gives you CFO
Next, take into account investing and financing activities, and sum up Cash Flow from Op, Inv, and Fin to get net change in cash at the bottom
Link cash on the BS to the ending cash number on the CFS, and add NE to Ret Earn within the Equity category on the BS.
Link each non-cash adjustment to the appropriate asset or liability and do the same for items in CFI and CFF.
Now Assets should = L + E
Most Important fin statement
CFS
- tells you how much CASH the company is generating
- IS is misleading because it includes non-cash revenye and expenses and excludes cash spending such as CapEx
if you only had 2 statements, which would you pick?
IS and BS
- can create the CFS from these (assuming u have a copy of the BS at the start and end of the period)
- it would be much harder to make an IS from the BS and CFS
How might the financial statements of a company in the UK or Germany be different from those of a company based in the US?
IS and BS tend to be similar across regions, but companies that use IFRS often start the CFS with something other than NE. There are also minor naming differences; IS could be named differently.
What should you do if a company’s CFS starts with something other than NE?
For modeling and valuation purposes, you should convert this CFS into one that starts with NE and makes the standard adjustments.
Large companies should provide a reconciliation that shows you how to move from NE to CFO. If not, you might have to stick with the original format
How do you know when a revenue or expense line item should appear on the IS?
- happened only during the period (this is why monthly rent shows up but not paying for a factory that will last for 10 years aka capex)
- is tax deductible (or affects the company’s taxes)
How do you tell whether something should be an A, L, or Equity on the BS?
Asset: is an item that will generate future cash flow for the company or can be sold for cash
L: item that will cost the company cash in the future and cannot be sold (because it represents payments the company owes)
E: item similar to Liabilities because it represents funding sources for the company - but they will not result in future cash costs.
How do you tell whether or not something appears on the CFS?
-has already appeared on the IS and affected NE, but it’s noncash, and you need to adjust for it to determine company’s true Cash Flow
OR
-It has not appeared on IS and it does affect company’s cash balance
A company uses cash-based accounting rather than accrual.
A customer buys a TV from the company using a credit card. How would the company record this transaction differently from an accrual accounting firm?
Revenue would not show up until the company charges the customer’s credit card, receives authorization, and deposits the funds in its bank account. Rev show up as Cash on BS
Accrual ACC: sale would show up as revenue right away. it would go as AR in BS
A company begins offering 12-month installment plans to customers so that they can pay $500 or $1000 courses over a year instead of all upfront. How will its cash flows change?
The first year, cash flow will decrease since they aren’t receiving up-front cash flow
So, a $1,000 payment in Month 1 now turns into $83 in Month 1, $83 in Month 2, and so on. This situation corresponds to Accounts Receivable: The Asset on the Balance Sheet that represents owed future payments from customers. The long-term impact depends on how much sales grow as a result of this change. If sales grow substantially and the company’s Revenue and Net Income increase, that might be enough to offset the reduced cash flow and make the company better off.
A company decides to prepay its monthly rent - an entire year upfront - because it can save 10% by doing so. Will this prepayment boost cash flow?
Not in that year, an increase in an asset results in a decrease in cash flow
After that year, it will mean that the expense is paid so cash flow will increase
Your friend is analyzing a company and says that you always have to look at the Cash Flow Statement to find the full amount of Depreciation.
Is he right? And if so, what are the implications?
Yes. This happens because companies often embed Dep within other line items such as COGS or OpEx on IS because portions of Dep might correspond to different functions in the company. There could be dep for sales and marketing, R&D, and cust support.
A company mentions that it collects cash payments from customers for a monthly subscription service a year in advance. Why would a company do this, and what is the cash flow impact?
A company would collect cash payments for a monthly service long in advance if it has the market power do so.
It’s always better to get cash earlier rather than later because of the time value of money, so if the market and customers support this plan, any company would do it.
This practice always boosts a company’s cash flow. It corresponds to Deferred Revenue, and on the CFS, an increase in Deferred Revenue will be a positive entry that boosts a company’s cash flow.
Why is Accounts Receivable (AR) an Asset, but Deferred Revenue (DR) a Liability?
AR corresponds to future cash payments that customers are expected to make. This means that this line items will generate cash in the future (aka an asset)
DR is a L because it will cost the company cash in the future. This is because the company has already received the cash from a good/service but not sent it out; when it does, it will need to incur the expenses and tax payments from it.