Financial Statement & Ratio Analysis
Financial Statement & Ratio Analysis
Financial Statement & Ratio Analysis
Analysis
Financial Analysis
Assessment of the firms past,
present and future financial
conditions
Done to find firms financial
strengths and weaknesses
Primary Tools:
Financial Statements
Comparison of financial ratios to past,
industry, sector and all firms
Financial Statements
Balance Sheet
Income Statement
Cashflow Statement
Statement of Retained
Earnings
Ratio Analysis
Ratio Analysis
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Liquidity
Acid Test
Also referred to as the Quick ratio
(Current assets stock) : liabilities
1:1 seen as ideal
The omission of stock gives an indication of the cash
the firm has in relation to its liabilities (what it owes)
A ratio of 3:1 therefore would suggest the firm has 3
times as much cash as it owes very healthy!
A ratio of 0.5:1 would suggest the firm has twice as
many liabilities as it has cash to pay for those liabilities.
This might put the firm under pressure but is not in
itself the end of the world!
Current Ratio
Looks at the ratio between Current Assets and Current
Liabilities
Current Ratio = Current Assets : Current
Liabilities
Ideal level? 1.5 : 1
A ratio of 5 : 1 would imply the firm has 5 of assets to
cover every 1 in liabilities
A ratio of 0.75 : 1 would suggest the firm has only 75p
in assets available to cover every 1 it owes
Too high Might suggest that too much of its assets are
tied up in unproductive activities too much stock, for
example?
Too low - risk of not being able to pay your way
Investment/Shareholders
Investment/Shareholders
Earnings per share profit after tax / number of
shares
Price earnings ratio market price / earnings per
share the higher the better generally for
company. Comparison with other firms helps to
identify value placed on the market of the business.
EV / EBITDA Ratio - Enterprise Value / EBITDA
ratio - the higher the better generally for company .
It measures the operational performance of the
firm.
Dividend yield ordinary share dividend / market
price x 100 higher the better. Relates the return
on the investment to the share price.
Gearing
Gearing
Gearing Ratio = Long term
loans / Capital employed x 100
The higher the ratio the more the
business is exposed to interest
rate fluctuations and to having to
pay back interest and loans before
being able to re-invest earnings
Profitability
Profitability
Profitability measures look at how much
profit the firm generates from sales or
from its capital assets
Different measures of profit gross and
net
Gross profit effectively total revenue
(turnover) variable costs (cost of sales)
Net Profit effectively total revenue
(turnover) variable costs and fixed costs
(overheads)
Profitability
Gross Profit Margin = Gross profit /
turnover x 100
The higher the better
Enables the firm to assess the impact of
its sales and how much it cost to
generate (produce) those sales
A gross profit margin of 45% means
that for every 1 of sales, the firm
makes 45p in gross profit
Profitability
Net Profit Margin = Net Profit / Turnover
x 100
Net profit takes into account the fixed costs
involved in production the overheads
Keeping control over fixed costs is important
could be easy to overlook for example the
amount of waste - paper, stationery, lighting,
heating, water, etc.
e.g. leaving a photocopier on overnight uses enough
electricity to make 5,300 A4 copies. (1,934,500 per year)
1 ream = 500 copies. 1 ream = 5.00 (on average)
Total cost therefore = 19,345 per year or 1 persons
salary
Profitability
Return on Capital Employed
(ROCE) = Profit / capital
employed x 100
Profitability
The higher the better
Shows how effective the firm is in
using its capital to generate profit
A ROCE of 25% means that it uses
every 1 of capital to generate 25p
in profit
Partly a measure of efficiency in
organisation and use of capital
Financial
Asset Turnover
Asset Turnover = Sales turnover / assets
employed
Using assets to generate profit
Asset turnover x net profit margin = ROCE
Stock Turnover
Stock turnover = Cost of goods sold / stock
expressed as times per year
The rate at which a companys stock is turned over
A high stock turnover might mean increased efficiency?
But: dependent on the type of business
supermarkets might have high stock turnover ratios
whereas a shop selling high value musical
instruments might have low stock turnover ratio
Low stock turnover could mean poor customer
satisfaction if people are not buying the goods
(Marks and Spencer?)
Debtor Days
Debtor Days = Debtors / sales turnover x
365
Shorter the better
Gives a measure of how long it takes the
business to recover debts
Can be skewed by the degree of credit facility
a firm offers
EXERCISE 1
LIABILITES
Capital
Reserves
ASSETS
180 Net Fixed Assets
20 Inventories
Term Loan
300 Cash
Bank C/C
200 Receivables
Trade Creditors
50 Goodwill
Provisions
50
800
400
150
50
150
50
800
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
EXERCISE 2
LIABILITIES
2005-06 2006-07
ASSETS
Capital
300
Reserves
140
160 Security
Electricity
320
Bank CC (Hyp)
200506
200607
730
750
30
30
280 Investments
110
110
490
150
170
Unsec. Long T L
150
170 S I P
20
30
Creditors (RM)
120
140
170
30
20
310
240
30
190
50
50
1600
1760
70 Finished Goods
Bills Payable
40
80 Cash
Expenses Payable
20
30 Receivables
Provisions
20
40 Loans/Advances
Goodwill
Total
1600
1760
Exercise 3.
LIABIITIES
ASSETS
Equity Capital
800
Preference Capital
100 Inventory
300
Term Loan
600 Receivables
150
Bank CC (Hyp)
Sundry Creditors
Total
1400
50
100
1400
= 2:1
Exercise 4.
LIABILITIES
Capital + Reserves
ASSETS
355
265
7 Cash
100 Receivables
1
125
Bank Overdraft
38 Stocks
Creditors
26 Prepaid Expenses
9 Intangible Assets
30
Provision of Tax
Proposed Dividend
128
15
550
550
Q. What is the Current Ratio ?
Ans : (1+125 +128+1) / (38+26+9+15)
: 255/88 = 2.89 : 1
Q What is the Quick Ratio ?
Exercise 4.
contd
LIABILITIES
Capital + Reserves
P & L Credit Balance
Loan From S F C
ASSETS
355
7 Cash
100 Receivables
265
1
125
Bank Overdraft
38 Stocks
Creditors
26 Prepaid Expenses
9 Intangible Assets
30
Provision of Tax
Proposed Dividend
128
15
550
550
Q. What is the Debtors Velocity Ratio ? If the sales are Rs. 15 Lac.
Ans : ( Average Debtors / Net Sales) x 12 = (125 / 1500) x 12
= 1 month
Q. What is the Creditors Velocity Ratio if Purchases are Rs.10.5 Lac ?
Ans : (Average Creditors / Purchases ) x 12 = (26 / 1050) x 12 = 0.3 months
Exercise 12. From the following financial statement calculate (i) Current Ratio (ii)
Acid test Ratio (iii) Inventory Turnover (iv) Average Debt Collection Period (v)
Average Creditors payment period.
C.Assets
Sales
1500
Inventories
125
Cost of sales 1000
Debtors
250
Gross profit
500
Cash
225
C. Liabilities
Trade Creditors
200
(i) Current Ratio : 600/200 = 3 : 1
(ii)Acid Test Ratio : Debtors+Cash /Trade creditors = 475/200 = 2.4 : 1
(iii) Inventory Turnover Ratio : Cost of sales / Inventories = 1000/125 = 8 times
(iv) Average Debt collection period : (Debtors/sales) x 365 = (250/1500)x365 = 61
days
(v)Average Creditors payment period : (Trade Creditors/Cost of sales) x 365
(200/100) x 365 = 73 days
Evaluate performance
Structure analysis
Show the connection between
activities and performance
Benchmark with