FA 6 - Analyzing Financial Statements Flashcards

1
Q

Return on Equity

A

ROE = Net Income/ Owners’ Equity

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2
Q

The DuPont Framework

A

ROE = Profitability (Profit Margin) X Efficiency (Asset Turnover) X Leverage (Leverage)

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3
Q

Profit Margin and Gross Profit Margin

A

Profit Margin = Net Income/ Sales

Gross Profit Margin = Gross Profit/ Sales
Gross Profit = Revenue - COGS

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4
Q

EBIAT

A

Earnings Before Interest After Taxes
Measure of how much income the business has generated while ignoring the effect of financing and capital - i.e. the proportion of debt that a business has.

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5
Q

Inventory Turnover and Days Inventory

A

Inventory Turnover = COGS/ Average Inventory
how efficiently business is managing its inventory levels; higher => more efficient.

Days Inventory = 365/ Inventory Turnover
Average number of days the inventory is held before it is sold.

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6
Q

Accounts Receivable Turnover and Average Collection Period

A

Accounts Receivable Turnover = Credit Sales/ Average Accounts Receivable
business’ efficiency in collecting receivables from customers; higher => more efficient.

Average Collection Period = 365/ AR Turnover
a.k.a. Days Sales Outstanding or Days Sales in Receivables.
Average number of days it took for a business to collect payment from a customer

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7
Q

Accounts Payable Turnover and Days Purchases Outstanding

A

Accounts Payable Turnover = Credit Purchases (or COGS)/ Average Accounts Payable
how long it takes a business to pay its vendors

Days Purchases Outstanding = 365/ AP Turnover

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8
Q

Cash Conversion Cycle

A

Measure of how long it takes a business from the time it has to pay for inventory from its suppliers until it collects cash from its customers.

Cash Conversion Cycle =
Days Inventory + Average Collection Period - Days Purchases Outstanding

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9
Q

Leverage ratio and Debt to Equity

A

Equity Multiplier = Average Total Assets/ Average Total Equity
If all debts are financed by equity, multiplier is 1. As liabilities increase, multiplier increases.

Debt to Equity = Average Total Liabilities/ Average Total Equity

Higher leverage implies higher potential returns; higher risk; higher impact of potential losses.

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10
Q

Current and Quick Ratios

A

Current Ratio = Current Assets/ Current Liabilities
business’ ability to pay its short term obligations

Quick Ratio = (Current Assets - Inventory)/ Current Liabilities
highly liquid assets; a.k.a. acid test ratio

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11
Q

Interest Coverage Ratio

A

Interest Coverage Ratio = EBIT/ Interest Expense
a.k.a. Times Interest Earned
Earnings Before Interest and Taxes = Net Income + Interest Expense + Tax Expense

this is a good measure of how capable a business is of making the interest payments of its debt - i.e. it tells us the number of times over that a company can cover its interest expense using its EBIT.

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12
Q

Seasonality

A

can cause repeating fluctuations

this can be seen when comparing statements from several smaller periods rather than for the whole year

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13
Q

Ratios are useful for comparison because

A

eliminate the impact of size difference

but influenced by managerial judgment

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14
Q

Typical policy differences

A
  • how revenue is recognized;
  • capitalizing expenditures; and
  • depreciation.
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15
Q

Common Size Balance Sheet

A

For comparison and to see trends:

i. divide each number in balance sheet by total assets; and
ii. divide each number in income statement by sales.

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