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FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 1 Financial statements and cash flow (chapter 3)

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Presentation on theme: "FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 1 Financial statements and cash flow (chapter 3)"— Presentation transcript:

1 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 1 Financial statements and cash flow (chapter 3)

2 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 2 Sources of Information Annual reports Wall Street Journal Internet - www.yahoo.com www.yahoo.com - www.smartmoney.com Mergent online SEC - EDGAR - 10K & 10Q reports

3 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 3 The Annual Report Balance sheet – provides a snapshot of a firm’s financial position at one point in time. Income statement – summarizes a firm’s revenues and expenses over a given period of time. Statement of cash flows – reports the impact of a firm’s activities on cash flows over a given period of time. Statement of stockholders’ equity – shows how much of the firm’s earnings were retained, rather than paid out as dividends.

4 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 4 Overview of D’Leon Inc. Snack food company that underwent major expansion in 2010. So far, expansion results have been unsatisfactory. - Company’s cash position is weak. - Suppliers are being paid late. - Bank has threatened to cut off credit. Board of Directors has ordered that changes must be made!

5 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 5 Balance Sheet: Assets 2011 7,282 632,160 1,287,360 1,926,802 1,202,950 263,160 939,790 2,866,592 2010 57,600 351,200 715,200 1,124,000 491,000 146,200 344,800 1,468,800 Cash A/R Inventories Total CA Gross FA Less: Dep. Net FA Total Assets

6 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 6 Balance Sheet: Liabilities and Equity Accts payable Notes payable Accruals Total CL Long-term debt Common stock Retained earnings Total Equity Total L & E 2011 524,160 636,808 489,600 1,650,568 723,432 460,000 32,592 492,592 2,866,592 2010 145,600 200,000 136,000 481,600 323,432 460,000 203,768 663,768 1,468,800

7 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 7 Income Statement 2011 2010 Sales $6,034,000 $3,432,000 COGS 5,528,000 2,864,000 Other expenses 519,988 358,672 Total oper. costs excl. deprec. & amort. $6,047,988 $3,222,672 Depreciation and amortization 116,960 18,900 EBIT ($ 130,948) $ 190,428 Interest expense 136,012 43,828 EBT ($ 266,960) $ 146,600 Taxes (106,784) 58,640 Net income ($ 160,176) $ 87,960

8 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 8 Other Data No. of shares EPS DPS Stock price Lease pmts 2011 100,000 -$1.602 $0.11 $2.25 $40,000 2010 100,000 $0.88 $0.22 $8.50 $40,000

9 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 9 Statement of Stockholders’ Equity (2011) Total Common Stock Retained Stockholders’ Shares Amount Earnings Equity Balances,12/31/10 100,000 $460,000 $203,768 $663,768 2011 Net income (160,176) Cash dividends (11,000) Addition (subtraction) to retained earnings (171,176) Balances, 12/31/11 100,000 $460,000 $ 32,592 $492,592

10 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 10 Did the expansion create additional after-tax operating income? AT operating income= EBIT(1 – Tax rate) AT operating income 11 = -$130,948(1 – 0.4) = -$130,948(0.6) = -$78,569 AT operating income 10 = $114,257

11 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 11 What effect did the expansion have on net operating working capital?

12 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 12 Assessment of the Expansion’s Effect on Operations

13 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 13 What was the free cash flow (FCF) for 2011? FCF 11 = [-$130,948(1 – 0.4) + $116,960] – [($1,202,950 – $491,000) + $70,642] = -$744,201 Is negative free cash flow always a bad sign?

14 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 14 Performance Measures for Evaluating Managers Accounting statements insufficient for evaluating managers’ performance because they do not reflect market values. Performance Measures MVA =Difference between market value and book value of a firm’s common equity. P 0 x Number of shares – Book value. EVA =Estimate of a business’ true economic profit for a given year. Investor-supplied capital Cost of capital EBIT(1 – T) – x

15 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 15 What was D’Leon’s MVA in 2010 and 2011? MVA 10 = ($8.50 x 100,000) – $663,768 = $186,232. MVA 11 = ($2.25 x 100,000) – $492,592 = -$267,592. Shareholder wealth has been destroyed!

16 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 16 What is the relationship between EVA and MVA? If EVA is positive, then AT operating income > cost of capital needed to produce that income. Positive EVA on annual basis helps to ensure MVA is positive. MVA is applicable to entire firm, while EVA can be calculated on a divisional basis as well.

17 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 17 Federal Income Tax System

18 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 18 Corporate and Personal Taxes Both have a progressive structure (the higher the income, the higher the marginal tax rate). Corporations - Rates begin at 15% and rise to 35% for corporations with income over $10 million, although corporations with income between $15 million and $18.33 million pay a marginal tax rate of 38%. - Also subject to state tax (around 5%).

19 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 19 Tax treatment of various uses and sources of funds Interest paid – tax deductible for corporations (paid out of pre-tax income), but usually not for individuals (interest on home loans being the exception). Interest earned – usually fully taxable (an exception being interest from a (muni”). Dividends paid – paid out of after-tax income. Dividends received – taxed as ordinary income for individuals (“double taxation”). A portion of dividends received by corporations is tax excludable, in order to avoid “triple taxation”.

20 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 20 Tax Treatment of Various Uses and Sources of Funds Dividends received: most investors pay 15% taxes through 2012. The rate is scheduled to rise after 2012. - Investors in the 10% or 15% tax bracket pay 0% on qualified dividends through 2012. - Dividends are paid out of net income which has already been taxed at the corporate level, this is a form of “double taxation”. - A portion of dividends received by corporations is tax excludable, in order to avoid “triple taxation.”

21 FIN303 Vicentiu Covrig 21 Learning objectives Annual report; Balance sheet; Income Statement items you see on the slides You DO NOT need to know the Statement of Cash Flows (3.4) Free Cash Flow MVA and EVA Taxes All the numerical problems on the slides and recommended below from end of chapter You need to know to do After Tax Income problems and remember the formula from page 81 Questions: ST-1, ST-2 a,b,c,d; 3-1 to 3-5; 3-73-9,3-10 Problems: 3-1, 3-2, 3-3, 3-5, 3-8, 3-9, 3-12


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