Financial Statement
Financial Statement
Statem
ent of
Chang
es in E Pitfalls
The Bala quity
nce Shee in Fina
t ncial S
Related S tateme
Income tatements nt Anal Financi
State ysis al Stat
ment ement
and Sche Fraud
dules Role of
Cash Fl Audito
ow Sta rs
tement
A B C D
Revenue/Sales Gross Profit Operating Expenses Operating Income
(EBIT):
Revenue/Sales: The Calculated as Expenses related Earnings Before
total income earned Revenue minus to the day-to-day Interest and
from the company’s COGS. It reflects running of the Taxes. It
primary business how efficiently a business, such represents the
activities, such as company produces as salaries, rent, company's
sales of products or and sells its utilities, and profitability from
services. goods. marketing. core operations
The Balance sheet
01 02 03
1
Stateme • Investing Activities
nt
Cash flows related to the acquisition
2
• Financing Activities
Cash flows from transactions with
3
atement of Changes in Equity Opening
B equity
The a l abalance
n c eat the
beginning of the period.
The Statement of Changes in Equity shows how the
company’s equity has changed during a given period. It
tracks changes in retained earnings, stockholder Net Income or
equity, and other equity-related accounts. L oprofit
The s sor loss generated during the
period, which affects retained earnings.
Other
C hadjustments,
Any other a n g e ssuch as issuing
new stock, repurchasing stock, or
changes due to foreign currency
translation.
Other Related Statements and Schedules
E !
F RE
ommon Pitfalls in Financial Statement Analys
0 0
Overlooking Non- Ignoring Industry Impact of Off-
Recurring Items Comparisons
0 Balance-Sheet
1
Financial statements might include non-
recurring items like asset sales or one-
time gains. These can distort profitability
2
: Financial ratios are more meaningful when
compared to industry benchmarks. A company’s
ratios may look healthy in isolation but could lag 3Some companies may hide liabilities or risks
off their balance sheet which can mislead
investors and creditors. It's important to look
and make a company appear more behind its competitors in the same industry.
for these items and assess the company’s
profitable than it really is. total risk exposure.
Focusing Only on
0 Short-Term Results
0 Cash Flow
Misinterpretation
4 5
Analyzing financial statements from a short-
term perspective might overlook long-term While profitability is important, a company’s true
trends. For example, a company might show financial health is also determined by its cash flow.
low profitability in the short term due to heavy Even a highly profitable company might run into
investment in research and development trouble if its cash flow is negative, indicating it
(R&D) that promises long-term benefits. cannot cover its operational and financial needs.
he Role of Auditors in Financial Statements