International Financial Statement Analysis Workbook. Elaine Henry
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Thomas R. Robinson
International Financial Statement Analysis Workbook
CFA Institute is the premier association for investment professionals around the world, with over 124,000 members in 145 countries. Since 1963 the organization has developed and administered the renowned Chartered Financial Analyst® Program. With a rich history of leading the investment profession, CFA Institute has set the highest standards in ethics, education, and professional excellence within the global investment community and is the foremost authority on investment profession conduct and practice.
Each book in the CFA Institute Investment Series is geared toward industry practitioners along with graduate-level finance students and covers the most important topics in the industry. The authors of these cutting-edge books are themselves industry professionals and academics and bring their wealth of knowledge and expertise to this series.
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL
STATEMENT ANALYSIS WORKBOOK
Third Edition
Thomas R. Robinson, CFA
Elaine Henry, CFA
Wendy L. Pirie, CFA
Michael A. Broihahn, CFA
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Cover design: Wiley
Copyright © 2015 by CFA Institute. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.
The First and Second Editions of this book were published by Wiley in 2008 and 2012 respectively.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
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ISBN 978-1-118-99948-6 (Hardcover)
ISBN 978-1-119-02971-7 (ePDF)
ISBN 978-1-119-02972-4 (ePub)
PART I
LEARNING OUTCOMES, SUMMARY OVERVIEW, AND PROBLEMS
CHAPTER 1
FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS: AN INTRODUCTION
LEARNING OUTCOMES
After completing this chapter, you will be able to do the following:
● describe the roles of financial reporting and financial statement analysis;
● describe the roles of the key financial statements (statement of financial position, statement of comprehensive income, statement of changes in equity, and statement of cash flows) in evaluating a company's performance and financial position;
● describe the importance of financial statement notes and supplementary information – including disclosures of accounting policies, methods, and estimates – and management's commentary;
● describe the objective of audits of financial statements, the types of audit reports, and the importance of effective internal controls;
● identify and describe information sources that analysts use in financial statement analysis besides annual financial statements and supplementary information;
● describe the steps in the financial statement analysis framework.
SUMMARY OVERVIEW
● The primary purpose of financial reports is to provide information and data about a company's financial position and performance, including profitability and cash flows. The information presented in financial reports – including the financial statements and notes – and other reports – including management's commentary or management's discussion and analysis – allows the financial analyst to assess a company's financial position and performance and trends in that performance.
● The basic financial statements are the statement of financial position (i.e., the balance sheet), the statement of comprehensive income (i.e., a single statement of comprehensive income or two statements consisting of an income statement and a statement of comprehensive income), the statement of changes in equity, and the statement of cash flows.
● The balance sheet discloses what resources a company controls (assets) and what it owes (liabilities) at a specific point in time. Owners' equity represents the net assets of the company; it is the owners' residual interest in or residual claim on the company's assets after deducting its liabilities. The relationship among the three parts of the balance sheet (assets, liabilities, and owners' equity) may be shown in equation form as follows: Assets = Liabilities + Owners' equity.
● The income statement presents information on the financial results of a company's business activities over a period of time. The income statement communicates how much revenue and other income the company generated during a period and what expenses, including losses, it incurred in connection with generating that revenue and other income. The basic equation underlying the income statement is Revenue + Other income – Expenses = Net income.
● The statement of comprehensive income includes all items that change owners' equity except transactions with owners. Some of these items are included as part of net income, and some are reported as other comprehensive income (OCI).
● The statement of changes in equity provides information about increases or decreases in the various components of owners' equity.
● Although the income statement and balance sheet provide measures of a company's success, cash and cash flow are also vital to a company's long-term success. Disclosing the sources and uses of cash helps creditors, investors, and other statement users evaluate the company's liquidity, solvency, and financial flexibility.
● The notes (also referred to as footnotes) that accompany the financial statements are an integral part of those statements and provide information that is essential to