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Learn how to read, understand, analyze, and interpret different types of financial reports
In the newly revised and updated 10th Edition of How to Read a Financial Report, seasoned accounting, financial, and business consultant Tage C. Tracy guides readers through reading, understanding, analyzing, and interpreting various types of financial reports, including cash flow, financial condition, and profit performance reports. This book also reveals the various connections between different financial metrics, reports, and statements, discusses changes in accounting and finance reporting rules, current practices, and recent trends, and explains how financial information can be manipulated, such as through inclusion or omission of certain KPIs.
This bestselling guide uses jargon-simplified and easy-to-understand language to make the information accessible to all, regardless of finance or accounting background. Updates to the 10th Edition include:
An essential all-in-one guide on the art of reading a financial report and avoiding common pitfalls and misconceptions, How to Read a Financial Report earns a well deserved spot on the bookshelves of all business leaders and investors who want to be able to read and understand financial reports and statements like a professional.
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 to the Tenth Edition ix
Part One-Fundamentals 1
1 Arming You with Essential Knowledge 3
2 Starting with Cash Flows 13
3 Bedrock Financial Statement #1: The Income Statement 23
4 Bedrock Financial Statement #2: The Balance Sheet 31
5 Reporting Cash Flows 39
Part Two- Connections 49
6 Fitting Together Financial Statements 51
7 Sales Revenue and Accounts Receivable 59
8 Cost of Sales Revenue, Inventory, and Accounts Payable 65
9 Operating Expenses and Prepaid Expenses 77
10 Depreciation and Amortization Expense, and Fixed and Other Long- Term Assets 83
11 Operating Expenses and Accounts Payable 95
12 Accruing Liability for Unpaid Expenses 101
13 Income Tax Expense and Its Liability 107
14 Interest Expense, Accrued Liabilities, and Loans Payable 113
15 Net Income, Retained Earnings, and Earnings per Share (EPS) 123
16 Connecting the Cash Flow Dots 129
Part Three- Using and Analyzing Financial Statements 145
17 Footnotes and Management Discussions 147
18 Financial Statement Ratios and Analysis: Strength 159
19 Financial Statement Ratios and Analysis: Performance 173
20 Financial Engineering 187
21 Financial Fraud, aka Cooking the Books 199
22 CPAs and Financial Reports 211
23 Basic Questions, Basic Answers 219
About the Author 235
Index 237
In past editions of this book, Chapter 1 dove right into the critical concept of gaining a clear understanding of how businesses produce and consume cash. In fact, we opened with this all-important statement:
Savvy business managers, owners, lenders, investors, and analysts pay a significant amount of attention to cash flows. Cash flows represent the heartbeat and pulse of every business, and without producing a steady heartbeat and healthy pulse of positive cash flows, a business would soon most likely end up on life support-or worse yet, die.
For this edition, I felt that I should begin by providing an explanation of the primary differences between what constitutes a financial report and the purpose and role of financial statements. While I touch on the elements of preparing financial reports, the primary focus of this book is how to read and understand financial statements, which make up the nerve center of the financial report. (Do not fret, as I will get to the critical concept of cash flows in Chapter 2 and again in Chapter 5.)
To start, it would be helpful to clarify the difference between the purpose and function of financial statements and a company's financial reports. In this context, I am referring to publicly traded companies and other large businesses that are required, by regulatory bodies such as the SEC, or by third parties such as a large lender, to issue quarterly or annual financial reports. An important concept to keep in mind is that financial statements represent a part (albeit a critical part) of a company's financial report. Looking at it differently, it would be extremely difficult to produce a financial report without including financial statements, but financial statements can be produced and presented to third parties without a full financial report. In effect, financial statements by themselves are a financial report.
It is important to keep in mind that while a company's financial statements represent the backbone for analyzing and evaluating its financial performance, financial reports include extensive additional financial, business, legal, and regulatory material that accompany the financial statements. The actual financial statements may take up anywhere from three to six pages of an external business financial report, while the complete financial report may often exceed 100 pages (thanks to management providing their discussion and assessment of operating results, along with the required footnotes that accompany audited financial statements).
Although this book is about how to read and understand financial statements, understanding what additional content and data is most often included in financial reports, and why, makes sense because I focus on two primary tranches of additional information: management discretionary disclosures and financial statement footnotes (including supporting schedules). I describe these as follows:
In summary, it is important to remember that this chapter refers to financial information as presented in external financial reports-those that circulate outside the business. These financial reports and communications are designed mainly for use by outside business shareowners, analysts, company lenders, governmental agencies, and the like, with the business shareowners, executive management team, and creditors (e.g., lenders, strategic partners and vendors, etc.) representing the three primary stakeholders in the business. Internal business executives, managers, and staff have access to significantly more information than that released in the company's external financial reports. This information is incredibly detailed in nature and is usually highly confidential, so external disclosure is tightly guarded. A more thorough discussion on internally generated business financial information appears in our sister book, How to Write a Financial Report, and is supported by the words of wisdom bestowed on us by Warren Buffett: When analyzing financial information, "the devil is in the details." It goes without saying that invaluable internal financial information is both highly sought after and closely guarded, given its importance.
It should be obvious that business managers, company lenders, investors, regulatory agencies, and countless other parties need to clearly understand an entity's financial performance, in a timely manner. This is common sense, no doubt, but you would be absolutely amazed at how often this basic concept is overlooked or, for lack of a better term, neglected by even the senior most internal company executive management teams.
Expanding on this thought, I would like to further note that all, yes all, businesses, organizations, non-for-profits, and governments (referred to as "entities" throughout this chapter), in one fashion or another, should produce reliable financial information on which business and economic decisions are made. Here again, this should be common sense, but I selectively used the term should because not all entities actually produce reliable financial information. Do not ask us how these entities prepare tax returns, execute financial management tasks, or make business and economic decisions, but in the spirit of full transparency, assuming all entities actually maintain accounting systems and produce reliable financial information can be a fatal error.
Focusing on entities that produce reliable financial information, I would like to note that financial information comes in all shapes, sizes, and forms ranging from something as small as preparing a flash report that summarizes the sales performance of a sales representative in a specific geographic region to something as large as Apple, Inc. producing its annual report for shareholders and other external readers to peruse.
The primary means of communicating an entity's financial information to external parties is via its financial statements, the preparation of which is one of the main functions performed by accountants. In a sense, accountants act as the financial scorekeepers of the entity as it is their job to ensure that complete, accurate, reliable, and timely (i.e., CART) financial statements are produced.
Financial statements are sent regularly by an entity to both internal and external parties including lenders, investors, financial analysts, regulatory bodies, internal management-and...
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