Cash Flow Statement
Cash Flow Statement
Cash Flow Statement
financial statements used by most businesses for financial reporting. All three statements are
prepared from the same accounting data, but each statement serves its own purpose. The
purpose of the cash flow statement is to report the sources and uses of cash during the reporting
period.
Cash flows from operating activities are related to your principal line of business and include the
following:
Investing activities include capital expenditures – disbursements that are not charged to expense
but rather are capitalized as assets on the balance sheet. Investing activities also include
investments (other than cash equivalents as indicated below) that are not part of your normal line
of business. These cash flows could include:
Financing activities include cash flows relating to the business’s debt or equity financing:
Cash for purposes of the cash flow statement normally includes cash and cash equivalents. Cash
equivalents are short-term, temporary investments that can be readily converted into cash, such
as marketable securities, short-term certificates of deposit, treasury bills, and commercial paper.
The cash flow statement shows the opening balance in cash and cash equivalents for the
reporting period, the net cash provided by or used in each one of the categories (operating,
investing, and financing activities), the net increase or decrease in cash and cash equivalents for
the period, and the ending balance.
There are two methods for preparing the cash flow statement – the direct method and the indirect
method. Both methods yield the same result, but different procedures are used to arrive at the
cash flows.
Direct Method
Under the direct method, you are basically analyzing your cash and bank accounts to identify
cash flows during the period. You could use a detailed general ledger report showing all the
entries to the cash and bank accounts, or you could use the cash receipts and disbursements
journals. You would then determine the offsetting entry for each cash entry in order to
determine where each cash movement should be reported on the cash flow statement.
Another way to determine cash flows under the direct method is to prepare a worksheet for each
major line item, and eliminate the effects of accrual basis accounting in order to arrive at the net
cash effect for that particular line item for the period. Some examples for the operating activities
section include:
• Ending inventory
• Minus beginning inventory
• Plus beginning balance in accounts payable to vendors
• Minus ending balance in accounts payable to vendors
• Equals cash payments for inventory
Interest paid:
Under the direct method, for this example, you would then report the following in the cash flows
from operating activities section of the cash flow statement:
Similar types of calculations can be made of the balance sheet accounts to eliminate the effects
of accrual accounting and determine the cash flows to be reported in the investing activities and
financing activities sections of the cash flow statement.
Indirect Method
In preparing the cash flows from operating activities section under the indirect method, you start
with net income per the income statement, reverse out entries to income and expense accounts
that do not involve a cash movement, and show the change in net working capital. Entries that
affect net income but do not represent cash flows could include income you have earned but not
yet received, amortization of prepaid expenses, accrued expenses, and depreciation or
amortization. Under this method you are basically analyzing your income and expense accounts,
and working capital. The following is an example of how the indirect method would be
presented on the cash flow statement:
The net effect of the above would then be reported as cash provided by (used in) operating
activities.
The cash flows from investing activities and financing activities would be presented the same
way as under the direct method.
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