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Read and understand financial reports like an expert, including the "big three" financial statements
Accompanying the new 10th edition of How to Read a Financial Report, How to Read a Financial Report Workbook provides hands-on exercises and active tools that teach readers not just how to read, analyze, and interpret a variety of financial reports but in addition, provides bonus material related to better understanding the types of capital used by companies to support business growth. To explain concepts in an easy-to-understand way, this book is lighter on text and instead features a wealth of exhibits and accompanying companion exhibits to first showcase various scenarios and then compare two scenarios using different assumptions.
This workbook also includes "in the trenches" content that enables readers to equate key concepts with commonly used "street" language in finance. In this workbook, readers will learn and expand their knowledge with:
How to Read a Financial Report Workbook is a helpful interactive learning resource that can be used every day by investors, lenders, business leaders, analysts, and managers seeking to enhance their career path and upward mobility by gaining more knowledge in understanding financial information and performances.
Over the past 30+ years, Tage C. Tracy has operated a financial consulting firm focused on offering CFO/executive-level support and planning services to private companies on a fractional basis, working primarily with startups, rapid growth companies, strategic exits and acquisitions, and turnarounds and challenged environments.
List of Exhibits vii
Preface xiii
Part One-A Refresher Course in the Basics
1 Starting with the Language of Finance and Cash Flows 3
2 A Refresher on the Big Three Financial Statements 17
3 Taking a Deeper Dive into the Statement of Cash Flows 33
4 Connecting the Financial Statements by Business Cycle 47
Part Two-Diving Deeper into Our Case Study
5 Our Case Study-Same Business, Three Different Pictures 63
6 Accounts Receivable: A Closer Examination 79
7 Inventory: An Asset Ripe for Errors 93
8 Long-Term Assets, Useful Lives, and Non-cash Expenses 111
9 Other Current Liabilities: A Breeding Ground for Abuse 125
10 Bringing It All Together with Cash 139
Part Three-Financial Analysis and Bonus Material
11 Financial Statement Ratios and Analysis: Strength 155
12 Financial Statement Ratios and Analysis: Performance 169
13 How to Manufacture Cash from the Balance Sheet 187
14 Net Profits and Cash Flow: Real or Imaginary 199
15 Deciphering the Cap Table and Cap Stack 211
About the Author 223
Index 225
Chapter 1 dives headfirst into two critical topics that will be on full display throughout this book. First, I provide a crash course on the language of accounting and finance. Simply put, in order to master reading (covered in my book How to Read a Financial Report), writing (covered in my book How to Write a Financial Report), and understanding financial statements and reports, it is essential that you learn the basic jargon.
Second, understanding how businesses generate and consume cash is a topic that is of critical importance and always on full display. As such, the second half of Chapter 1 dives right into the importance of cash flow, which is expanded upon further in Chapter 3, with even more insight provided in Chapters 12 and 15. True to our primary mission of translating complex accounting and financial concepts into simple and easy-to-understand tools and ideas, cash flows, the lifeblood of every business, is positioned with added reverence throughout this book to ensure that you remember the golden rule of operating a business: Never, ever run out of cash!
If you're heading to France or Italy, it goes without saying that you should brush up on the basics of French or Italian because being able to communicate in the local dialect can improve your travel experience. The same goes for accounting and finance. If you can at least master some basic terminology, it will be less of a struggle to understand financial statements. This section of the chapter covers two buckets of terminology, basic and advanced.
Basic terminology is primarily associated with communicating the results of financial statements (from an accounting perspective), with a heavy weighting toward the income statement. Below, I've provided a sampling of the most commonly used basic accounting and financial terminology:
Advanced terminology tends to be centered in references to financial concepts that are focused on cash flows, forecasts, projections, and financing topics (i.e., raising capital such as securing loans or selling equity in a company). With that said, here's a summary listing of advanced terminology to reference.
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