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Principles of Managerial Finance 9th Edition

Principles of Managerial Finance 9th Edition. Chapter 4. Financial Statement Analysis. Learning Objectives. Understand the parties interested in performing financial ratio analysis and the common types of ratio comparisons.

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Principles of Managerial Finance 9th Edition

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  1. Principles of Managerial Finance9th Edition Chapter 4 Financial Statement Analysis

  2. Learning Objectives • Understand the parties interested in performing financial ratio analysis and the common types of ratio comparisons. • Describe some of the cautions that should be considered in performing financial ratio analysis. • Use popular ratios to analyze a firm’s liquidity and the activity of inventory, accounts receivable, accounts payable, and total assets.

  3. Learning Objectives • Discuss the relationship between debt and financial leverage and the ratios that can be used to assess the firm’s degree of indebtedness and its ability to meet interest payments associated with debt. • Evaluate a firm’s profitability relative to its sales, asset investment, and owners equity investment. • Use the DuPont system and a summary of financial ratios to perform a complete ratio analysis.

  4. Using Financial Ratios Interested Parties • Ratio analysis involves methods of calculating and interpreting financial ratios to assess a firm’s financial condition and performance. • It is of interest to shareholders, creditors, and the firm’s own management.

  5. Using Financial Ratios Types of Ratio Comparisons • Trend or time-series analysis Used to evaluate a firm’s performance over time

  6. Using Financial Ratios Types of Ratio Comparisons • Trend or time-series analysis • cross-sectional analysis Used to compare different firms at the same point in time

  7. Using Financial Ratios Types of Ratio Comparisons • Trend or time-series analysis • cross-sectional analysis • industry comparative analysis One specific type of cross sectional analysis. Used to compare one firm’s financial performance to the industry’s average performance

  8. Using Financial Ratios Types of Ratio Comparisons • Trend or time-series analysis • cross-sectional analysis • industry comparative analysis • Combined Analysis Combined analysis simply uses a combination of both time series analysis and cross-sectional analysis

  9. Using Financial Ratios Cautions for Doing Ratio Analysis • Ratios must be considered together; a single ratio by itself means relatively little. • Financial statements that are being compared should be dated at the same point in time. • Use audited financial statements when possible. • The financial data being compared should have been developed in the same way. • Be wary of inflation distortions.

  10. Ratio Analysis Example Bartlett Company

  11. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Current Ratio Current ratio = total current assets total current liabilities Current ratio = $1,233,000 = 1.97 $620,000

  12. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Current Ratio • Quick Ratio Quick ratio = Total Current Assets - Inventory total current liabilities Quick ratio = $1,233,000 - $289,000 = 1.51 $620,000

  13. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Inventory Turnover Inventory Turnover = Cost of Goods Sold Inventory Inventory Turnover = $2,088,000 = 7.2 $289,000

  14. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Average Collection Period ACP = Accounts Receivable Net Sales/360 ACP = $503,000 = 58.9 days $3,074,000/360

  15. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Average Payment Period APP = Accounts Payable Annual Purchases/360 APP = $382,000 = 94.1 days (.70 x $2,088,000)/360

  16. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Total Asset Turnover Total Asset Turnover = Net Sales Total Assets Total Asset Turnover = $3,074,000 = .85 $3,579,000

  17. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Financial Leverage Ratios • Debt Ratio Debt Ratio = Total Liabilities/Total Assets Debt Ratio = $1,643,000/$3,597,000 = 45.7%

  18. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Times Interest Earned Ratio Times Interest Earned = EBIT/Interest Times Interest Earned = $418,000/$93,000 = 4.5

  19. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Fixed-Payment coverage Ratio (FPCR) FPCR = EBIT + Lease Pymts Interest + Lease Pymts + {(Princ Pymts + PSD) x [1/(1-t)]} FPCR = $418,000 + $35,000 = 1.9 $93,000 + $35,000 + {($71,000 + $10,000) x [1/(1-.29)]}

  20. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Common-Size Income Statements

  21. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Gross Profit Margin GPM = Gross Profit/Net Sales GPM = $986,000/$3,074,000 = 32.1%

  22. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Operating Profit Margin OPM = EBIT/Net Sales OPM = $418,000/$3,074,000 = 13.6%

  23. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Net Profit Margin NPM = Net Profits After Taxes/Net Sales NPM = $231,000/$3,074,000 = 7.5%

  24. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Return on Total Assets (ROA) ROA = Net Profits After Taxes/Total Assets ROA = $231,000/$3,597,000 = 6.4%

  25. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Return on Equity (ROE) ROE = Net Profits After Taxes/Stockholders Equity ROE = $231,000/$1,954,000 = 11.8%

  26. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Earnings Per Share (EPS) EPS = Earnings Available to Common Stockholders Number of Shares Outstanding EPS = $221,000/76,262 = $2.90

  27. Ratio Analysis • Liquidity Ratios • Activity Ratios • Leverage Ratios • Profitability Ratios • Price Earnings (P/E) Ratio P/E = Market Price Per Share of Common Stock Earnings Per Share P/E = $32.25/$2.90 = 11.1

  28. DuPont System of Analysis • The DuPont system is used to dissect the firm’s financial statements and to assess its financial condition. • It merges the income statement and balance sheet into two summary measures of profitability: ROA and ROE as shown in figure 4.2 on the following slide. • The top portion focuses on the income statement, and the bottom focuses on the balance sheet. • The advantage of the DuPont system is that it allows you to break ROE into a profit on sales component, an efficiency-of-asset-use component, and a use-of- leverage component.

  29. Summarizing All Ratios

  30. Summarizing All Ratios

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