Statements Flashcards
Define FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Financial statements are documents that provide information to various stakeholders about how a company has performed over a period of time. There are two: the statement of financial position and statement of comprehensive income.
Define a STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
A statement of comprehensive income summarises a firm’s revenue and costs over a period of time to show whether the business has made a profit or a loss.
What are the components of a statement of comprehensive income?
- Sales revenue
- Cost of sales
- Gross profit
- Expenses
- Operating profit
- Interest (+/-)
- Exceptional items (+/-)
- Profit for the year
- Taxation
- Profit for the year (after tax)
What can a statement of comprehensive income be used to assess?
- Financial performance
- Cost structure
- Profit quality
What are the advantages of a statement of comprehensive income?
- Shows how much revenue a business has generated
- Helps to assess profitability in 3 ways: gross profit , operating profit and net profit
- Provides details about costs and how successful managers have been in controlling them.
What are the disadvantages of a statement of comprehensive income?
- Does not show what may happen in the future
- Analysis should be made over a number of years or against others in the industry
Who uses the statement of comprehensive income and what for?
- Shareholders to identify the level of profit the business gains and therefore the amount they will gain in dividends.
- Competitors will assess the level of profitability
- Government, to ensure the business is paying the correct amount of corporation tax
- Employees, to measure their job security and the number of bonuses they may gain based on level of profit
Define a STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
A statement of financial position is a document providing a snapshot of a business’ assets, liabilities and net worth at a specific point in time. Shows where major sources of finance have come from and how the business spends what it has raised.
What is the structure of a statement of financial position?
- Non current assets
- Current assets
- Current liabilities
- Net current assets (current assets - current liabilities)
- Non current liabilities
- NET ASSETS (total assets - total liabilities)
Financed by: - Share capital
- Retained profit
- TOTAL EQUITY (share capital + retained profit)
What are the advantages of a statement of financial position?
- Shows the short term liquidity of the business (can it pay off daily debts?)
- Shows the long term liquidity of the the business (has it borrowed an excessive amount?)
What are the disadvantages of a statement of financial position?
- It is a historical document and may not be a good indicator of future events
- Analysis should be done over several years or against other businesses in the industry
Who uses the statement of financial position and what for?
- Managers will look at how much cash is in the business. They will assess whether the business can pay off short term debt and how highly geared it is.
- Shareholders will ask how highly geared the business is and how attractive shares are in this business compared with others.
- Suppliers will ask does the business have enough money to pay off short term debts owed?
- Lenders will ask if it is possible to lend additional finance to the business?
What is the formula for capital employed?
Capital employed = non current liabilities + total equity