Ch. 12 Financial Statement Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

Vertical analysis

A

Expresses each item in a financial statement as a percentage of the same base amount such as a percentage of sales in the income statement or as a percentage of total assets in the balance sheet.

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2
Q

Horizontal analysis

A

Analyzes trends in financial statement data for a single company over time.

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3
Q

Liquidity

A

Refers to a company’s ability to pay its current liabilities.
-The accounts used to calculate liquidity ratios are located in the current assets and current liabilities sections of the balance sheet.

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4
Q

Solvency

A

Refers to a company’s ability to pay its long-term liabilities.

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5
Q

Receivables turnover ratio

A

Net credit sales divided by average accounts receivable; the number of times during a year that the average accounts receivable balance is collected (“turns over”).

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6
Q

Average collection period

A

Approximate number of days the average accounts receivable balance is outstanding. It equals 365 divided by the receivables turnover ratio.

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7
Q

Inventory turnover ratio

A

Cost of goods sold divided by average inventory; the number of times the firm sells its average inventory balance during a reporting period.

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8
Q

Average days in inventory

A

Approximate number of days the average inventory is held. It equals 365 days divided by the inventory turnover ratio.

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9
Q

Current ratio

A

Current assets divided by current liabilities; measures the availability of current assets to pay current liabilities.

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10
Q

Acid-test ratio

A

Cash, current investments, and accounts receivable divided by current liabilities; measures the availability of liquid current assets to pay current liabilities.

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11
Q

Debt to equity ratio

A

Total liabilities divided by stockholders’ equity; measures a company’s solvency risk.

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12
Q

Times interest earned ratio

A

Ratio that compares interest expense with income available to pay those charges.

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13
Q

Profitability ratios

A

Measure the earnings or operating effectiveness of a company.

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14
Q

Gross profit ratio

A

Gross profit divided by net sales; measures the amount by which the sale price of inventory exceeds its cost per dollar of sales.

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15
Q

Return on assets

A

Net income divided by average total assets; measures the amount of net income generated for each dollar invested in assets.

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16
Q

Profit Margin

A

Net income divided by net sales; indicates the earnings per dollar of sales.

17
Q

Asset Turnover

A

Net sales divided by average total assets, which measures the sales per dollar of assets invested.

18
Q

Return on equity

A

Net income divided by average stockholders’ equity; measures the income generated per dollar of equity.

19
Q

Price-earnings (PE) ratio

A

Compares a company’s share price with its earnings per share

20
Q

Growth stocks

A

Stocks that have high expectations of future earnings growth and therefore usually trade at higher PE ratios.
-Said to be great stocks at a good price

21
Q

Value stocks

A

Stocks that have lower share prices in relationship to their fundamental ratios and therefore trade at lower (bargain) PE ratios.
-Said to be good stocks at a great price.

22
Q

Discontinued operation

A

The sale or disposal of a significant component of a company’s operations.

  • ie: ABC company reported a $515 million loss on discontinued operations on the sale of its hard-disk drive business to XYZ company.
  • Sometimes a company will dispose of one of its business activities by ending operations and selling the individual assets.
  • We report any profits or losses on discontinued operations in the current year, separately from profits and losses on the portion of the business that will continue.
23
Q

Extraordinary item

A

An event that is (1) unusual in nature and (2) infrequent in occurrence.

  • Because of the unusual nature of these items, we don’t want to combine their effects on net income with those of normal operations.
  • A company must consider the definition of extraordinary in the context of the environment in which it operates.
  • We report extraordinary items separately, net of taxes, near the bottom of the income statement just below discontinued operations.
24
Q

Quality of earnings

A

Refers to the ability of reported earnings to reflect the company’s true earnings, as well as the usefulness of reported earnings to predict future earnings.

25
Q

Conservative accounting practices

A

Practices that result in reporting lower income, lower assets, and higher liabilities.

  • Larger estimation of the allowance for uncollectible accounts
  • write-down of overvalued inventory
  • Use of a shorter useful life for depreciation
  • Recording of a contingent litigation loss
26
Q

Aggressive accounting practices

A

Practices that result in reporting higher income, higher assets, and lower liabilities.

  • Lower estimation of the allowance for uncollectible accounts
  • Waiting to report an inventory write-down
  • Choosing a longer useful life for depreciation
  • Waiting to record a litigation loss.
27
Q

Financial Leverage

A

The amount of debt each company carries
-Remember, too, that debt can be good for the company as long as the return on investment exceeds the interest cost of borrowing.

28
Q

One-time income items

A

items that are part of net income in the current year that are not expected to persist
-includes: discontinued operations and extraordinary items.