CHAPTER 3
Analysis of Financial
Statements
3-1
Balance Sheet: Assets
2003E 2002
Cash 85,632 7,282
A/R 878,000 632,160
Inventories 1,716,480 1,287,360
Total CA 2,680,112 1,926,802
Gross FA 1,197,160 1,202,950
Less: Dep. 380,120 263,160
Net FA 817,040 939,790
Total Assets 3,497,152 2,866,592
3-2
Balance sheet:
Liabilities and Equity
2003E 2002
Accts payable 436,800 524,160
Notes payable 300,000 636,808
Accruals 408,000 489,600
Total CL 1,144,800 1,650,568
Long-term debt 400,000 723,432
Common stock 1,721,176 460,000
Retained earnings 231,176 32,592
Total Equity 1,952,352 492,592
Total L & E
3,497,152 2,866,592
3-3
Income statement
2003E 2002
Sales 7,035,600 6,034,000
COGS 5,875,992 5,528,000
Other expenses 550,000 519,988
EBITDA 609,608 (13,988)
Depr. & Amort. 116,960 116,960
EBIT 492,648 (130,948)
Interest Exp. 70,008 136,012
EBT 422,640 (266,960)
Taxes 169,056 (106,784)
Net income 253,584 (160,176)
3-4
Other data
2003E 2002
No. of shares 250,000 100,000
EPS $1.014 -$1.602
DPS $0.220 $0.110
Stock price $12.17 $2.25
3-5
Why are ratios useful?
Ratios standardize numbers and
facilitate comparisons.
Ratios are used to highlight
weaknesses and strengths.
3-6
What are the five major categories of
ratios, and what questions do they
answer?
Liquidity: Can we make required payments?
Asset management: right amount of assets
vs. sales?
Debt management: Right mix of debt and
equity?
Profitability: Do sales prices exceed unit
costs, and are sales high enough as
reflected in PM, ROE, and ROA?
Market value: Do investors like what they
see as reflected in P/E and M/B ratios?
3-7
Calculate the forecasted current
ratio for 2003 & 2002.
Current ratio = Current assets / Current
liabilities
= $2,680,112 / $1,144,800
= 2.34 times or, 2.34 : 1
2002 = ???
3-8
Calculate the Quick ratio or, Acid
Test for 2003 & 2002.
Quick ratio = (Current assets – Inventory) /
Current liabilities
= ($2,680,112 - 1,716,480)/
$1,144,800
= 0.84 times or, 0.84 : 1
2002 = ???
3-9
Comments on current & Quick
ratio
2003 2002 2001 Ind.
Current
2.34x 1.17x 2.30x 2.70x
ratio
Quick 1.11x
0.84x 0.39x 0.30x
ratio
Expected to improve but still below the
industry average.
Liquidity position is weak.
3-10
What is the inventory turnover
vs. the industry average?
Inv. turnover = Sales / Inventories
= $7,035600 / $1,716,480
= 4.10x
2003 2002 2001 Ind.
Inventory
4.1x ??? 4.8x 6.1x
Turnover
3-11
Comments on
Inventory Turnover
Inventory turnover is below industry
average.
The company might have old
inventory, or its control might be poor.
No improvement is currently
forecasted.
3-12
Fixed asset and total asset turnover
ratios vs. the industry average
FA turnover = Sales / Net fixed assets
= $7,036 / $817 = 8.61x
TA turnover = Sales / Total assets
= $7,036 / $3,497 = 2.01x
3-13
Evaluating the FA turnover and
TA turnover ratios
2003 2002 2001 Ind.
FA TO 8.6x ??? 10.0x 7.0x
TA TO 2.0x ??? 2.3x 2.6x
FA turnover projected to exceed the industry
average.
TA turnover below the industry average.
Caused by excessive currents assets (A/R
and Inv).
3-14
Evaluating the Average Collection
period and Average payment period
DSO = Receivables / Annual sales/365
= $8,78,000 / 7,035,600/365
= 46 days
Average payment period
= Payables / Annual purchases/365
= $ 1,144,800/ $5,875,992/365
= 71 days
3-15
Calculate the debt ratio and TIE ratios.
Debt ratio = Total debt / Total assets
= ($1,145 + $400) / $3,497 =
44.2%
TIE = EBIT / Interest expense
= $492.6 / $70 = 7.0x
3-16
How do the debt management ratios
compare with industry averages?
2003 2002 2001 Ind.
D/A 44.2% ??? 54.8% 50.0%
TIE 7.0x ??? 4.3x 6.2x
What can we tell about D/A and TIE by
comparing with the industry average?
3-17
Profitability ratios: Profit margin
Profit margin = Net income / Sales
= $253.6 / $7,036 = 3.6%
3-18
Appraising profitability with the profit
margin
2003 2002 2001 Ind.
PM 3.6% ??? 2.6% 3.5%
Profit margin was very bad in 2002, but is projected to
exceed the industry average in 2003.
3-19
Profitability ratios:
Return on assets and Return on equity
ROA = Net income / Total assets
= $253.6 / $3,497 = 7.3%
ROE = Net income / Total common
equity
= $253.6 / $1,952 = 13.0%
3-20
Appraising profitability with the return
on assets and return on equity
2003 2002 2001 Ind.
ROA 7.3% -5.6% 6.0% 9.1%
ROE 13.0% -32.5% 13.3% 18.2%
Both ratios rebounded from the previous year,
but are still below the industry average. More
improvement is needed.
Wide variations in ROE illustrate the effect that
leverage can have on profitability.
3-21
Calculate the Price/Earnings, and
Market/Book ratios.
P/E = Price / Earnings per share
= $12.17 / $1.014 = 12.0x
3-22
Calculate the Price/Earnings, and
Market/Book ratios.
M/B = Mkt price per share / Book value per
share
= $12.17 / ($1,952 / 250) = 1.56x
2003 2002 2001 Ind.
P/E 12.0x -1.4x 9.7x 14.2x
M/B 1.56x 0.5x 1.3x 2.4x
3-23
Analyzing the market value ratios
P/E: How much investors are willing to pay
for $1 of earnings.
M/B: How much investors are willing to
pay for $1 of book value equity.
For each ratio, the higher the number, the
better.
3-24
Extended DuPont equation:
Breaking down Return on equity
ROE = (Profit margin) x (TA turnover) x (Equity multiplier)
= 3.6% x 2 x 1.8
= 13.0%
PM TA TO EM ROE
2001 2.6% 2.3 2.2 13.3%
2002 -2.7% 2.1 5.8 -32.5%
2003E 3.6% 2.0 1.8 13.0%
Ind. 3.5% 2.6 2.0 18.2%
3-25
The Du Pont system
Also can be expressed as:
ROE = (NI/Sales) x (Sales/TA) x (TA/Equity)
Focuses on:
Expense control (PM)
Asset utilization (TATO)
Debt utilization (Eq. Mult.)
Shows how these factors combine to
determine ROE.
3-26
Trend analysis
Analyzes a firm’s
financial ratios over
time
Can be used to
estimate the likelihood
of improvement or
deterioration in
financial condition.
3-27
Potential problems and limitations
of financial ratio analysis
Comparison with industry averages is
difficult for a conglomerate firm that
operates in many different divisions.
“Average” performance is not necessarily
good, perhaps the firm should aim
higher.
Seasonal factors can distort ratios.
3-28
More issues regarding ratios
Different operating and accounting
practices can distort comparisons.
Sometimes it is hard to tell if a ratio is
“good” or “bad”.
Difficult to tell whether a company is,
on balance, in strong or weak position.
3-29
Qualitative factors to be considered
when evaluating a company’s future
financial performance
Are the firm’s revenues tied to 1 key
customer, product, or supplier?
What percentage of the firm’s business
is generated overseas?
Competition
Future prospects
Legal and regulatory environment
3-30