Walk me through the 3 financial statements.
Can you give me examples of major line items on each of the financial statements?
How do the 3 statements link together?
If I were stranded on a desert island and only had one financial statement and I wanted to review the overall health of a company‚ which statement would I use and why?
Let’s say I could only look at 2 statements to assess a company’s prospects - which 2 would I use and why?
You would pick the I/S and B/S because you can create the SCF from both of those (assuming that you have the “Beginning” and “Ending” Balance Sheets that correspond to the same period the I/S is tracking.
Let’s say I have a new‚ unknown item that belongs on the Balance Sheet. How can I tell whether it should be an Asset or a Liability?
How can you tell whether or not an expense should appear on the Income Statement?
Two conditions must be true for an expense to appear on the I/S:
1. It must correspond to something in the current period
2. It must be tax-deductible.
• Employee compensation and marketing spending‚ for example‚ satisfy both conditions.
• Depreciation and Interest Expense also meet both conditions - Depreciation only represents the “loss in value” of PP&E (or to be more technically precise‚ the allocation of the investment in PP&E) in the current period you’re in.
• Repaying debt principal does NOT satisfy both of these conditions b/c it is not tax-deductible.
• ADV. NOTE: Technically‚ “tax-deductible” here means “deductible for BOOK tax purposes” (i.e. only the tax number that appears on the company’s I/S).
Let’s say that you have a non-cash expense (Depreciation or Amortization for example) on the Income Statement. Why do you add back the entire expense on the Cash Flow Statement?
How do you decide when to capitalize rather than expense a purchase?
If Depreciation is a non-cash expense‚ why does it affect the cash balance?
Although Depreciation is a non-cash expense‚ it is tax-deductible. Therefore‚ an increase in Depreciation will reduce the amount of taxes you pay‚ which boosts your cash balance. The opposite happens if Depreciation decreases.
Where does Depreciation usually appear on the Income Statement?
It could be a separate line item‚ or it could be embedded in COGS or Operating Expenses - each company does it differently. Note that the end result for accounting questions is the same: Depreciation always reduced Pre-Tax Income.
Why is the Income Statement not affected by Inventory purchases?
The expense of purchasing Inventory is ONLY recorded on the I/S when the goods associated with it have been manufactured and sold - so if it’s just sitting in a warehouse‚ it does not count as Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) until the company manufactures it into a product and sells it.
Debt repayment shows up in Cash Flow from Financing on the Cash Flow Statement. Why don’t interest payments also show up there? They’re a financing activity!
What’s the difference between Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses?
When would a company collect cash from a customer and NOT record it as revenue?
If cash collected is not recorded as revenue‚ what happens to it?
Deferred Revenue reflects cash that we’ve already collected upfront for a product/service we haven’t delivered yet. Why is it a Liability? That’s great for us!
So what’s the difference between Accounts Receivable and Deferred Revenue? They sound similar.
There are 2 main differences:
1. A/R has NOT yet been collected in cash from customers‚ whereas Deferred Revenue has been.
2. A/R is for a product/service that the company has ALREADY delivered but hasn’t been paid for yet‚ whereas Deferred Revenue is for a product/service the company has NOT yet delivered.
• A/R is an Asset b/c it implies additional future cash whereas Deferred Revenue is a Liability b/c it implies the opposite.
How long does it usually take for a company to collect its Accounts Receivable balance?
Generally the Accounts Receivable Days are in the 30-60 day range‚ though it can be higher for companies selling higher-priced items and it might be lower for companies selling lower-priced items with cash payments only.
How are Prepaid Expenses and Accounts Payable different?
It’s similar to the difference between A/R and Deferred Revenue:
You’re reviewing a company’s Balance Sheet and you see an “Income Taxes Payable” line item on the Liabilities side. What is this?
You see a “Noncontrolling Interest” (AKA Minority Interest) line item on the Liabilities side of a company’s Balance Sheet. What does this mean?
You see an “Investments in Equity Interest” (AKA Associate Companies) line item on the Assets side of a firm’s Balance Sheet. What does this mean?
Could you ever negative Shareholders’ Equity? What does it mean?
Yes‚ it is common in 2 scenarios:
1. Leveraged Buyouts w/ dividend recapitalizations - it means that the owner of the company has taken out a large portion of its equity (usually in the form of cash)‚ which can sometimes turn the number negative.
2. It can also happen if the company has been losing money consistently and therefore has declining Retained Earnings balance‚ which is a portion of SE.
• It doesn’t “mean” anything in particular‚ but it might demonstrate that the company is struggling.
• NOTE: The Equity Value (AKA Market Cap) is different from SE and that Equity Value can NEVER be negative.