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Accounting & Finance Understanding the book value.

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Presentation on theme: "Accounting & Finance Understanding the book value."— Presentation transcript:

1 Accounting & Finance Understanding the book value

2 Topics Covered The Balance Sheet The Income Statement The Statement of Cash Flows Accounting for Differences

3 The Balance Sheet Definition Financial statements that show the value of the firm’s assets and liabilities at a particular point in time (from an accounting perspective).

4 The Balance Sheet The Main Balance Sheet Items Current Assets Cash & Securities Receivables Inventories + Fixed Assets Tangible Assets Intangible Assets

5 The Balance Sheet The Main Balance Sheet Items Current Assets Cash & Securities Receivables Inventories + Fixed Assets Tangible Assets Intangible Assets Current Liabilities Payables Short-term Debt + Long-term Liabilities + Shareholders’ Equity =

6 Market Value vs. Book Value Book Values are determined by GAAP Market Values are determined by current values Equity and Asset “Market Values” are usually higher than their “Book Values”

7 Market Value vs. Book Value Example According to GAAP, your firm has equity worth $6 billion, debt worth $4 billion, assets worth $10 billion. The market values your firm’s 100 million shares at $75 per share and the debt at $4 billion. Q: What is the market value of your assets?

8 Market Value vs. Book Value Example According to GAAP, your firm has equity worth $6 billion, debt worth $4 billion, assets worth $10 billion. The market values your firm’s 100 million shares at $75 per share and the debt at $4 billion. Q: What is the market value of your assets? A: Since (Assets=Liabilities + Equity), your assets must have a market value of $11.5 billion.

9 Market Value vs. Book Value Example (continued) Book Value Balance Sheet Assets = $10 bilDebt = $4 bil Equity = $6 bil

10 Market Value vs. Book Value Example (continued) Book Value Balance Sheet Assets = $10 bilDebt = $4 bil Equity = $6 bil Market Value Balance Sheet Assets = $11.5 bilDebt = $4 bil Equity = $7.5 bil

11 The Income Statement Definition Financial statement that shows the revenues, expenses, and net income of a firm over a period of time (from an accounting perspective).

12 The Income Statement Earnings Before Income & Taxes (EBIT) EBIT = - total Revenues - costs - deprecation

13 The Income Statement Pepsico Income Statement (year end 1998) Net Sales 22,348 COGS9,330 Other Expenses 291 Selling, G&A expenses8,912 Depreciation expense 1,234 EBIT2,581 Net interest expense 321 Taxable Income2,260 Income Taxes 270 Net Income1,990

14 Profits vs. Cash Flows Differences “Profits” subtract depreciation (a non-cash expense) “Profits” ignore cash expenditures on new capital (the expense is capitalized) “Profits” record income and expenses at the time of sales, not when the cash exchanges actually occur “Profits” do not consider changes in working capital

15 The Statement of Cash Flows Definition Financial statement that shows the firm’s cash receipts and cash payments over a period of time.

16 The Statement of Cash Flows Pepsico Statement of Cash Flows (excerpt - year end 1998) Net Income1,990 Non-cash expenses Depreciation1,234 Other 382 Changes in working capital A/R=(303) A/P=253 Inv=(284) other=(47) (381) Cash Flow from Operations3,212 Cash Flow for New Investments (5,019) Cash Raised by New Financing 190 Net Change in Cash Position (1,617)

17 Accounting for Differences Subjective aspects exist in reporting earnings and book value Some liabilities may excluded from balance sheets International accounting standards vary


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