0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views

Overview of Financial Analysis

Financial analysis is the process of evaluating financial information to make decisions. It involves establishing objectives, studying the industry, evaluating financial statements using tools like ratios, and reaching conclusions. Ratios are used to analyze liquidity, activity, leverage, and profitability. However, ratios alone do not provide answers and should be used with other analysis elements. Common ratios calculated include the current ratio, debt ratio, times interest earned ratio, and earnings per share. Financial analysis helps understand a company's performance and financial position.

Uploaded by

ClarineRamos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views

Overview of Financial Analysis

Financial analysis is the process of evaluating financial information to make decisions. It involves establishing objectives, studying the industry, evaluating financial statements using tools like ratios, and reaching conclusions. Ratios are used to analyze liquidity, activity, leverage, and profitability. However, ratios alone do not provide answers and should be used with other analysis elements. Common ratios calculated include the current ratio, debt ratio, times interest earned ratio, and earnings per share. Financial analysis helps understand a company's performance and financial position.

Uploaded by

ClarineRamos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS

o Financial analysis is the process of evaluating financial and other information for decision-
making.
Overview of Financial Analysis
o SPECIFY THE OBJECTIVES OF THE ANALYSIS
o Focus on who is the financial statement user
o The identity of the user helps define what information is needed
Steps of a F/S Analysis
1. Establish objectives of the analysis
2. Study the industry and relate industry climate to current and projected economic developments -
o a growth industry?
o a dying industry?
o a changing industry?
o Develop knowledge of firm and quality of management
o Evaluate financial statements using basic tools
o Summarize findings
o Reach conclusions relevant to established objectives
Potential Financial Statement Users:
o Creditors
o Investors
o Managers
o Who else?
o What types of questions do each of these users seek answers to?
Data sources
o Financial statements (and notes)
o Auditors report
o Supplementary schedules
o 10K and 10Q reports filed with SEC
o Computerized data bases
o Info on industry norms/ratios
o Info on particular companies/industries/mutual funds
o Articles in popular/business press
o Websites
Tools for analysis
o Common size financial statements
o Financial ratios
o Trend analysis
o Structural analysis
o Industry comparisons
o Common sense and judgment
Financial Ratio Categories
o Liquidity Ratios
measure a firms ability to meet cash needs as they arise
o Activity Ratios
measure the liquidity of specific assets and the efficiency of managing assets
o Leverage Ratios
measure the extent of a firms financing with debt relative to equity and its ability to cover
interest and other fixed charges
o Profitability Ratios
measure the overall performance of a firm and its efficiency in managing assets, liabilities and
equity
Caution!
o Ratios are valuable, BUT..
o They do not provide answers of themselves and are not predictive
o They should be used with other elements of financial analysis
o There are no rules of thumb that apply to interpretation of ratios
Profitability Ratios
o Gross Profit Margin
Gross Profit/Net Sales
o Operating Profit Margin
Operating Profit/Net Sales
o Net Profit Margin
Net Earnings/Net Sales
o All measure firms ability to translate sales peso into profits
o Return on Investment (or Return on Assets)
Net Earnings/Total Assets
o Return on Equity
Net Earnings/Stockholders Equity
o Both measure overall efficiency of firm in managing investment in assets and generating return to
stockholders
o Cash Flow Margin
o Cash Flow from Operating Activities /Net Sales
o Measures ability to translate sales into cash (with which to pay bills)
o Cash Return on Assets
o Cash Flow from Operating Activities /Total Assets
o Useful comparison to return on investment
o Indicates firms ability to generate cash from utilizing its assets
Return on Investment
o Return on Investment (ROI)
ROI= NET OPERATING INCOME/ AVERAGE OPERATING ASSETS
o Net operating income
o Income before interest and taxes
o Operating assets
o Assets held for operating purposes ONLY
o i.e. cash, accounts receivable, inventory, plant and equipment
Liquidity Ratios
o Current Ratio
Current Assets/Current Liabilities
Measures ability to meet short-term cash needs
o Quick or Acid Test Ratio
Current Assets-Inventory/Current Liabilities
Measure ability to meet short-term cash needs more rigorously
o Cash Flow Liquidity Ratio
Cash +Marketable Securities +Cash Flow from Operating Activities/Current Liabilities
Focuses on ability of the firm to generate operating cash flows as a source of liquidity
Activity Ratios
o Average Collection Period
Accounts Receivable/Average Daily Sales
Helps gauge liquidity of accounts receivable (ability to collect cash from customers)
o Accounts Receivable Turnover
Net Sales/Accounts Receivable
Another measure of efficiency of firms collection and credit policies
o Inventory Turnover
Cost of Goods Sold/Inventory
Measures efficiency of inventory management
o Fixed Asset and Total Asset Turnover
Net Sales/Net PP&E (Fixed Asset T/O)
Net Sales/Total Assets (Total Asset T/O)
Both assess effectiveness in generating sales from investment in assets
Leverage: Debt Ratios
o Debt Ratio
Total Liabilities/Total Assets
o Long-Term Debt to Total Capitalization
Long-term Debt/Long-term Debt + Stockholders Equity
o Debt to Equity Ratio
Total Liabilities/Stockholders Equity
o All three measure extent of firms financing with debt
Leverage: Coverage Ratios
o Proportion and amount of debt in capital structure is important to analyst
o Tradeoff between risk and return
o Use of debt involves risk -- commitment to fixed charges
o Fixed charges must be COVERED -- following are some ratios to assess coverage
o Times Interest Earned
Operating Profit/Interest Expense
Indicates how well operating earnings cover fixed interest charges
o Fixed Charge Coverage
Operating Profit + Lease Payments/Interest Expense + Lease Payments
Broader measure of how well operating earnings cover fixed charges
o Cash Flow Adequacy
Cash Flow from Operating Activities/ Average Annual Long-Term Debt Maturities
Measures firms ability to cover long-term debt maturities each year
Rationale is that over the long-run operating cash flows must be adequate to cover investing activities
financed with debt

Other Ratios
o Earnings per Common Share
Net Earnings/Average Common Shares Outstanding
Indicates return on a per share basis
o Price to Earnings
Market Price of Common Stock/Earnings per Common Share
Expresses a multiple the stock market places on earnings
o Dividend Payout
Dividends per Share/Earnings per Share
Shows percentage of earnings paid out to stockholders
o Dividend Yield
Dividends per Share/Market Price of Common Share
Shows rate earned by shareholders from dividends relative to current stock price

You might also like