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Com 4FK3 Financial Statement Analysis Week 1, 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "Com 4FK3 Financial Statement Analysis Week 1, 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Com 4FK3 Financial Statement Analysis Week 1, 2012

2 2 Why Analyse F. S. Data? Efficient market hypothesis; market reacts intelligently and quickly to new information so analysis should not lead to excess return Paradox, if analysis is not profitable, nobody will do the analysis… so how can the market price securities efficiently?

3 3 Individual vs. Average Research studies on capital market efficiency study groups rather than single companies If the market is efficient on average, that doesn’t mean that there are not some mispriced securities Role of analyst: to bring about a correction to the mispricing of securities

4 4 Perfect Efficiency? Studies show that equity markets are not perfectly efficient –January effect –Price lags –Over or under reaction Analysis can help detect under and over priced firms

5 5 Purpose of Financial Statements Ideal world: disclose the true economic value of the company Real world: –required by law (Securities Regulators) –follows GAAP, wide latitude allowed Analysis required to “cleanse” statements of bias to set prices efficiently

6 The Adversarial Nature of Financial Reporting The purpose of financial reporting is to obtain cheap capital Martin Fridson & Fernando Alvaez Other incentives for misstatements include managerial compensation, which is often tied to the financial statement numbers 6

7 7 Other Uses Financial statements used for other purposes –credit analysis by a bank (not alone) –competitor analysis –merger and acquisition analysis Not Taxation –Corporations typically have separate sets of books for tax purposes –These books are not compliant with GAAP

8 8 Five Steps Identify the economic characteristics of the particular industry Identify the firm’s strategy Understand the firm’s financial statements and “cleanse” them Assess profitability and risk Value the firm Important This is an overview of the term paper

9 9 Economic Characteristics How does the industry operate: –number of competitors –principal types of assets and liabilities –typical capital structure –risk levels and types –differentiability of products

10 10 E. C. Pharmaceuticals High barriers to entry, research and approval costs before any revenue Patent protection gives high margins High risks; product liability, other drug makes your product obsolete Business risk leads to low level of debt Generic drug manufacturers, effectively a separate industry

11 11 Value Chain Analysis The various steps in the creation, manufacture, and distribution of a product or service Firm can be involved in all steps or concentrate on a few Pharmaceuticals Research Approval process Manufacture Create demand Distribution to retail outlets

12 12 Porter’s Five Forces Competitors, rivalry among firms Potential Entrants Equivalent Products & substitutes Bargaining Power of Customers Bargaining Power of Input Suppliers

13 13 Competitors Opportunities for growth Number and size of competitors Cost structure of product – fixed and variable costs Capacity issues Pressure on selling price and delivery Product quality

14 14 Potential Entrants Size of initial investment Degree of profit margin Learning curve impact on costs Relationship with customers Non financial barriers

15 15 Equivalent Products Availability of substitute products Type of technology Integration with customers end products Continuous improvement of product Downward pressure on costs

16 16 Bargaining Power of Customers Purchase quantities Generic nature of product Availability of product

17 17 Bargaining Power of Suppliers Quality requirements Generic nature of products Availability of materials and labour force Skill level of labour force

18 18 Economic Attribute Framework Demand: price sensitivity, growth, cyclic nature of demand Supply: number of firms, barriers to entry Manufacturing: capital intensive, complex Marketing: selling to business or consumer Financing: short or long-term financing needs

19 19 Soft Drink Industry Demand Relatively insensitive to price Low growth domestically, international opportunities Not cyclical Higher demand in warmer weather

20 20 Soft Drink Industry Supply 2 major branded suppliers domination of distribution channels creates barriers to entry Manufacturing Capital intensive but simple

21 21 Soft Drink Industry Marketing high brand recognition and demand pull Financing Bottling and transport operations require long term financing High profitability and low growth ( domestic ) lead to excess cash flow generation

22 22 Strategy Nature of product or service: is it unique (product differentiation) or low price Degree of integration with value chain Degree of geographical diversification Degree of industry diversification

23 23 Strategy for Coke Brand recognition allows for differentiation Value chain: Coke develops and advertises products and produces the syrup, but uses other companies to bottle and distribute Geographical: 67% of sales outside N. A. Industry diversification: virtually zero… operates in beverage industry but mainly in the soft drink subsection

24 24 Principal Financial Statements Balance Sheet, Income Statement, Statement of Cash Flows, Notes SEC (US) or OSC (Canada) requirements GAAP largely delegated to FASB (US) or CICA (Canada)

25 25 Balance Sheet Snapshot of the resources of the firm Assets = Liabilities + Shareholder equity Formats differ between countries –France and Germany; reverse order of current and noncurrent –UK; Assets + WC - Liabilities = Equity

26 26 Assets 2 categories; monetary & non-monetary Classification –Current Assets –Investments –Property, Plant, and Equipment –Intangibles

27 27 Liabilities Money to be paid in the future for goods or services already received Labour contracts, purchase orders, lease payments, etc. for benefits not yet received are not considered liabilities Noncurrent liabilities discounted at interest rate applicable when incurred

28 28 Shareholders’ Equity Value of assets and liabilities determines shareholders’ equity Often broken down to: –amounts initially contributed –retained earnings –valuation allowances –treasury stock

29 29 Quality of Balance Sheet Ignores valuable resources of the firm; patents, brand names, etc. Non-monetary assets at cost Some legal claims against the cash flows of the firm don’t appear as liabilities Noncurrent liabilities discounted at rate applicable when incurred, not current costs

30 30 Income Statement Measures operating performance Net Income = Revenues and gains – Expenses and losses GAAP requires accrual accounting –Revenue recognized when service rendered and cash or measurable receivable gained –Expenses matched with revenue

31 31 Classification Income from continuing operations –Main form of earnings Income, gains and losses from discontinued operations Extraordinary gains and losses Adjustments for changes in accounting principals

32 32 Quality of Earnings Managerial compensation is often tied to earnings, there is a potential that current earnings are not a good indicator of future earnings potential Analysts may want to adjust earnings for some items before assessing operating performance

33 33 Statement of Cash Flows A high growth firm can report positive net income and be running out of cash to pay creditors Statement of cash flows can provide early warning of problems

34 34 Classification Operating –The core business of the firm –In the long run, this must be positive for the firm to survive Investing Financing

35 35 Common Size Statements To aid in analyzing a firm common size financial statements are often prepared Balance sheet: divide all numbers by the total assets of that year Income statement: divide by sales

36 36 Financial Statement Ratios Profitability –EPS –ROCE Risk –Current ratio –CFO/average current liabilities –Interest coverage ratio –Debt/Equity ratio

37 37 Valuation of Firms P/E ratio –Theoretical model (1 + growth rate in earnings) Required return - growth rate in earnings Market to book ratio –Theoretical model 1 + Expected ROCE – required return Cost of equity - growth rate in earnings


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