Financial Statement Analysis
Financial Statement Analysis
Financial Statement Analysis
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
Financial statement analysis is used by internal and external stakeholders to evaluate
business performance and value.
Financial accounting calls for all companies to create a balance sheet, income statement,
and cash flow statement, which form the basis for financial statement analysis.
Horizontal, vertical, and ratio analysis are three techniques that analysts use when
analyzing financial statements.
Horizontal analysis compares data horizontally, by analyzing values of line items across two or
more years. Vertical analysis looks at the vertical effects that line items have on other parts of the
business and the business’s proportions. Ratio analysis uses important ratio metrics to calculate
statistical relationships.
Balance Sheet
The balance sheet is a report of a company’s financial worth in terms of book value. It is broken
into three parts to include a company’s assets, liabilities, and shareholder equity. Short-term
assets such as cash and accounts receivable can tell a lot about a company’s operational
efficiency; liabilities include the company’s expense arrangements and the debt capital it is
paying off; and shareholder equity includes details on equity capital investments and retained
earnings from periodic net income. The balance sheet must balance assets and liabilities to equal
shareholder equity. This figure is considered a company’s book value and serves as an important
performance metric that increases or decreases with the financial activities of a company.
Income Statement
The income statement breaks down the revenue that a company earns against the expenses
involved in its business to provide a bottom line, meaning the net profit or loss. The income
statement is broken into three parts that help to analyze business efficiency at three different
points. It begins with revenue and the direct costs associated with revenue to identify gross
profit. It then moves to operating profit, which subtracts indirect expenses like marketing costs,
general costs, and depreciation. Finally, after deducting interest and taxes, the net income is
reached.
Basic analysis of the income statement usually involves the calculation of gross profit margin,
operating profit margin, and net profit margin, which each divide profit by revenue. Profit
margin helps to show where company costs are low or high at different points of the operations.
activities section includes cash flow from both debt and equity financing. The bottom line shows
how much cash a company has available.
Financial Performance
Financial statements are maintained by companies daily and used internally for business
management. In general, both internal and external stakeholders use the same corporate finance
methodologies for maintaining business activities and evaluating overall financial performance.
When doing comprehensive financial statement analysis, analysts typically use multiple years of
data to facilitate horizontal analysis. Each financial statement is also analyzed with vertical
analysis to understand how different categories of the statement are influencing results. Finally,
ratio analysis can be used to isolate some performance metrics in each statement and bring
together data points across statements collectively.
such as horizontal, vertical, or ratio analysis, investors may develop a more nuanced picture of a
company’s financial profile.