Dev Financial Analysis-2
Dev Financial Analysis-2
Dev Financial Analysis-2
FI 403 E
QUESTIONS & EXERCISES : SESSION 1 & 2
4. Identify the following items as operating (O), investing (I), or financing (F) activities.
a. Property, plant and equipment (I) f. Short-term debt (F)
b. Current maturities of long-term debt (I) g. Accounts payable (O)
c. Inventories (O) h. Net income (I)
d. Accounts receivable (O) i. Accumulated depreciation
e. Common stock (I) j. Dividends (F)
First of all, the cash-flow statement is an essential document for implementing or understanding the
financial management of a company because it traces all the origins and uses of cash for a period. It
traces all cash flows, receipts and disbursements, for a period.
Cash flow is the amount of money coming in and going out of a company's account. These flows are
analyzed in accounting and finance to determine whether or not a company needs cash.
2. In a specific fiscal year, the free cash flow of a company turns negative. Has the
company destroyed or created wealth?
If cash-flow is negative, business expenses outweigh revenue. We are then in a deficit situation.
Having a negative cash-flow (or negative cash-flow) means that the final balance is lower than the
initial balance, which can be due to the payment of wages, the purchase of property, investment…
However, a positive cash-flow demonstrates that a business generates more cash in than cash out over
a period. It means that the ending balance is greater than the opening balance, which is often the result
of a return on investment, a sale of products or services, or even inventory, lower costs, better
interests…
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III- Exercises
Exercise N°1:
2. Will the accounting equation hold true for every corporation? Why?
Yes, because assets are always funded by liabilities (debt) or equity. All assets are either
freely and explicitly owned by the owner (equity) or funded by creditors (debt).
3. How is this company financed? Primarily with (liabilities / equity). How can you tell?
Total liabilities ($23,888) are greater than total stockholders’ equity ( $12,106)
a. What amount of cash does this company expect to receive from customers
within the next few months?
$ 4,683 million
$ 2,846 million
$ 381 million
• Since the company started business, how much net income was earned and
not yet distributed as dividends?
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$30,638million
Exercise N°2:
During the year N, High Wave Inc. had sales and cost of goods sold of €600 and €300
respectively. Depreciation was €150 and interest paid was €30. Taxes were calculated at a
straight rate of 34%. Dividend were €30.
Beginning net fixed assets were €500 and ending net assets were €750. High Wave Inc.
started the year with €2,130 in current assets and €1,620 in current liabilities, and the
corresponding ending figures were €2,260 and €1,710. All figures are in millions of €.
Required
1. Prepare an income statement for High Wave Inc. Has this company created or
destroyed wealth?
2. What was the cash flow of High Wave Inc. (using both Bottom-up and Top-down
approach) ? Why is this different from net income?
3. What was the change in net working capital during the year? What was the cash flow
from operating activities?
4. What was the net capital spending for the year?
5. Suppose now that the company distributed 20% of its net income and that the amount
of new and repaid borrowings during the year N was €175 and €90, respectively. What
was the cash flow from financing activities?
6. Calculate the increase (decrease) in cash.
1-
Sales 600
Cost of goods 300
Cross margin 300
EBITDA 300
Depreciation 150
Operating income 150
Interest expenses 30
Earnings before taxe 120
Taxes 40,80
Net Income 79,20
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2 – cash:
3- Working Capital:
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QUESTIONS: SESSION 3
1. What is the objective of financial statement analysis from the standpoint of a creditor?
The use of financial statement facilitates creditors to examine the financial health of a business. For an
effective business evaluation, it requires financial information such as a use of a balance sheet (is a summary of
what business owns and what it owes and the difference between the two), cashflow statement (is a log of cash
inflows and cash outflows and tracks the cash position of the business on a monthly basis), and an income
statement (summarizes the income and expenses of the dairy farm business and covers periods from one month
to one year. When it’s comes to analyzing a firm for creditors, it’s also about establishing all the factors such as
salaries, existing debt obligations, profit. Creditors determine whether the business show off a credit risk and
also if the company is capable to repay a debt.
3. What is the objective of financial statement analysis from the standpoint of a investor?
The balance sheet, the income statement, the cash flow tables, and their annexes are all
documents that reflect the major characteristics of the company's activity and assets.
As well as the press, internal documentation, social networks, the studies, academic
sources, databases.
5. How does the objective of a financial statement analysis for management differ from an analysis
done by creditors and investors?
While the objective of the analysis made by the creditors and the investors of the
company constitutes a proof of the productivity and the solvency of this one.
Understanding how to properly assess a company's financial accounts is crucial for any
financial expert.
Three crucial areas must be understood in order to do this:
The way the financial statements are organized
The economic characteristics of the sector in which the company operates and the tactics used by the
company to set itself apart from its rivals.
Creating an effective study of financial accounts typically involves six phases.
Establish the value chain analysis for the sector, or the sequence of processes that go into the
development, production, and distribution of the firm's goods and/or services.
This step frequently involves the use of tools like Porter's Five Forces analysis or economic attribute
analysis.
The nature of the company's goods or services, including their originality, level of profit margins,
development of brand loyalty, and cost management, should then be considered.
It's also important to take into account variables like supply chain integration, geographic
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diversification, and sector diversification.
Examine the important financial statements in light of the applicable accounting principles.
The correct evaluation of balance sheet accounts depends on factors including recognition, valuation,
and classification.
The main inquiry should be if this balance sheet accurately depicts the firm's financial situation.The
fundamental goal of analyzing the income statement is to accurately evaluate the earnings quality as a
comprehensive picture of the firm's economic performance.
Understanding the influence of the firm's operations, investments, and financial activities on its
liquidity position over the period—basically, where the money came from, where it went, and how
that affected the firm's overall liquidity—requires an analysis of the statement of cash flows.
This is the stage of evaluating the company and its financial statements where financial experts can
actually bring value.
Key financial statement ratios for liquidity, asset management, profitability, debt
management/coverage, and risk/market value are among the most used analysis tools.There are two
main considerations to consider when evaluating a company's profitability: how successful are the
activities of the company in relation to its assets, regardless of how the company finances those assets,
and how profitable is the company from the standpoint of equity shareholders.
It's crucial to develop the ability to break down return metrics into their core impact variables.
The final step in any financial statement ratio analysis is to compare the present ratios to those from
previous periods, to those of other companies, or to industry averages
Financial professionals must, despite it being frequently difficult, make realistic predictions about the
company's (and its industry's) future and analyze how these predictions will affect funding and cash
flows.
Pro-forma financial statements, based on strategies like the percent of sales approach, are a common
way to do this.
Although there are several valuation strategies, a sort of discounted cash flow methodology is the
most used.
These cash flows could take the shape of anticipated dividends or more intricate methods such free
cash flows to the equity holders or on an enterprise-wide basis.
Relative valuation or accounting-based metrics like economic value added are possible alternative
strategies.
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