Fundamentals/Financial Statements and Analysis Flashcards
Q1: What are the primary Personal Financial Statements?
Q2: What is the presentation of the statement related to Net Worth?
A1: Balance Sheet (Statement of Financial Position or Net Worth Statement), Income and Expense Statement (Statement of Cash Flows)
A2:
Cash & Cash Equivalents Liabilities
Invested Assets
Personal Use Assets Net Worth
Q1: What are the categories of ASSETS on the Balance Sheet?
Q2: Describe each
A1: Cash & Cash Equivalents, Invested Assets, Personal Use Assets
A2:
-
Cash & Cash Equivalents: (aka Current Assets); cash, checking, money market, CDs less than 12 months, CD ladder set to mature every 6 months
- Everthing client can convert to cash in 1 year
- DOES NOT include EE savings bonds
- Invested Assets: assets with greater than 12 month maturity
- Personal Use Assets: anything to maintain client’s lifestyle
Q1: How are liabilities stated on the Balance Sheet?
Q2: How are they classified? Examples?
Q3: What is Net Worth?
A1: Principal outstanding
A2:
- Current and Long-term
- Current - due within next 12 months and excludes interest unless already incurred
- Long-Term - greater than 12 months
A3: Net Worth = Assets - Liabilities
What are some limitations on the usefulness of the balance sheet?
- Why/how an asset increased in value
- Whether client bought more of an asset or did it appreciate?
- Why/how an asset or liability appears on the Balance Sheet
- If the client purchased or inherited an asset
- Does not explain changes in Net Worth
- Whether increase in Net Worth due to increased savings, inherited assets, appreciation of assets or debt retirement
Q1: What is included on a Statement of Income and Expenses (Statement of Cash Flows)?
Q2: What are the limitations?
A1: A listing of income, savings, expenses and taxes
A2:
- Does not consider employer’s contributions to retirement plans, only EE contributions to savings account
- Does not capture/report giving or receiving of gifts or inheritances
Q1: What is Financial Statement Analysis?
Q2: What is a limitation?
A1: Gives insight to a client’s strengths and weaknesses
- Answers questions
- How well client manages debt
- How well client is progressing towards financial goals
- How well client is able to meet short-term obligations
A2: Only a historical perspective, not predictive of the future
Q1: What is the type of expense used in Emergency Fund? How much does a client need?
Q2: Describe the type of expense used
Q3: So what isn’t included?
Q4: What is the formula for Emergency Fund?
A1: Non-discretionary expenses; 3-6 months
A2: only the expenses that do not go away if you lose your job
A3: Income taxes, payroll taxes, contributions to retirement savings account
A4: Emergency Fund = Current Assets / Monthly Non-discretionary expenses
What are the debt ratios?
- Consumer Debt Payments: less than 20% of NET INCOME
- Housing Debt Payments: less than/equal to 28% of GROSS INCOME
- Housing and All Other Recurring Debt: less than/equal to 36% of GROSS INCOME
NOTE: Do not subtract taxes or savings when calculating 28 or 36 ratios, formula requires GROSS INCOME
Q1: What is the formula for the Housing Ratio?
Q2: what is the formula for Housing and All Other Debt Ratio?
A1: monthly housing costs (PITI) / monthly gross income; ratio should be 28% or less
Principal
Interest
Taxes (property)
Insurance (Homeowners)
A2: monthly housing costs (PITI) + all other recurring debt payments / monthly gross income; ratio should be 36% or less
$250,000 Mortgage, 30 years, 6% interest, first payment July 1
Q1: What is the monthly payment?
Q2: What is the interest deduction in year 1?
Q3: What is the principal balance at the end of year 1?
A1: PMT = 1498.88
A2: 7481.21 (1 INPUT 6 SHIFT AMORT ==)
A3: 248487.93
(payments X number of months) - interest = mortgage reduction
(1498.88 X 6) - 7481.21 = 1512.07
250000 - 1512.07 = 248487.93
Q1: What are the performance ratios?
Q2: What are the benchmarks?
A1:
Savings Ratio: Annual Savings (EE + ER Contributions) / AGI
ROI: (Ending Investments - Beginning Investments - Savings - Gifts Received) / Average Invested Assets*
_*Average Invested Assets_ = (Beginning Investments + Ending Investments) / 2
A2:
Savings Ratio: 10-12% of Gross Income if savings stats before age 32; 20-25% age 45 or 50; important to include ER contributions in calculation
ROI: based on client’s age and risk tolerance
What are the limitations of Financial Ratio Analysis?
Inflation: difficult to compare one period to the next
Use of Estimates: Any type of Net Worth calculation includes personal use assets which are stated at an “estimated fair market value”
Benchmarks: very few for personal financial ratios and only serve as a rule of thumb, individual circumstances may case benchmarks to be irrelavent.
(Ex. Gates son and 10 -12% savings ratio)