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Balance Sheet Analysis. Agenda. Recap of the Income Statement. What is the Balance Sheet. Assets. Liabilities. Equity. Putting it all together. Case Study. What is an Income Statement.
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Agenda Recap of the Income Statement What is the Balance Sheet Assets Liabilities Equity Putting it all together Case Study
What is an Income Statement • The income statement summarizes the inflows and outflows of money (not necessarily cash) over an accounting period • Inflows = Revenues • Outflows = Expenses Inflow Outflow Outflows
Accrual Accounting Example Month 1: You cater an event where the cost to you was $100. The customer pays you $200 for your services. Month 2: You cater an event where the cost to you is $100. The customer agrees to pay you $200 next month
Income Statement Line Items • Start with the revenues and filter down through each expense to the bottom line (net income/earnings) • Revenue • - Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) • - Operating Expenses • Research and Development • Selling, General, & Administrative (SG&A) • Depreciation & Amortization • - Other • Non-Recurring • Interest • - Taxes • = Net Income
Balance Sheet What is it? • Snapshot of a company’s financial condition at a specific point in time • Called a balance sheet because it balances • Everything a company has (assets) is either owed to someone else (Liabilities) or belongs to the firm’s owners (Equity)
Assets The stuff that a company has • Assets Definition: resources that bring future economic benefit – either the prospect of future cash inflows or the prevention of future cash outflows
Assets The stuff that a company has • Assets vary in liquidity • Liquidity – how quickly an asset can be converted to cash Most Liquid • Cash and Cash Equivalents • Accounts Receivable • Inventory & Surplus • Short-term investments • Long-term investments • Property, Plant, and Equipment • Intangibles (including goodwill) • Land Current Assets Long-Term Assets Least Liquid
Liabilities • How does a company get these assets? • They can borrow money to buy assets • Liabilities
Liabilities Types of Liabilities • Accounts Payable • Deferred Revenue • Interest Payable • Short-term Debt • Current Long-term Debt • Long-term Debt • Pension Obligations Current Liabilities Long-Term Liabilities
Equity • What is Equity • The difference between a companies Assets and Liabilities • The “book value” of a company • Two Different Types of Equity • Owner’s Equity – If the company is a sole proprietorship • Stockholder’s Equity – If a company is a corporation • Includes: • Retained Earnings • Additional Paid-In Capital • Common Stock • Preferred Stock
Putting it all together Assets = Liabilities + Equity • BCI & Company buys a factory for $1 Billion, using some of its own cash and $400 Million of money it borrowed from the bank • What happens to the balance sheet? • $600M cash decrease • $1000M PP&E increase • TOTAL: Assets up $400M Liabilities Assets • $400M borrowed • TOTAL: Liabilities up $400M
Putting it all together Assets = Liabilities + Equity • BCI & Company delivers its service for $8000. The customer paid only $1000, promising to pay the remaining in monthly installments • What happens to the balance sheet? • $1000 cash increase • $7000 accounts receivable increase • TOTAL: Assets up $8000 Equity Assets • $8000 increase in retained earnings • TOTAL: Equity up $8000
The Balance Sheet Case Introduction • Does the balance sheet capture the real value of a company? • Not really • Cost Principle: Companies report assets at their historical cost • Monetary Unit Assumption: Assumes the dollar is stable over time • This creates problems • Is a piece of land worth $20,000 in 1950 worth only that amount today? • What is the purchasing power of $20,000 today anyway?
The Balance Sheet Case Study
The Balance Sheet Case Study • An asset’s book value can be higher or lower than its true value • Some assets are essentially fictional
The Balance Sheet Microsoft Case Study • What happened in Q4 2012?
The Balance Sheet Microsoft Case Study • aQuantive was the 14th largest advertising firm agency worldwide in 2005 • In 2007, MSFT spent $6.3B to acquire aQuantive • It paid an 85% premium over the then-current stock price “Joining the capabilities of [MSFT and aQuantive] is an important step toward our goal of becoming an industry leading, Internet-wide advertising platform.” - Kevin Johnson, Platforms and Services Division President, Microsoft
The Balance Sheet Microsoft Case Study • When you pay a premium for a company, the premium is recorded as “Goodwill” on a balance sheet • Example • If BCI & Co. pays $10 for “Common Cents Investment Group” with a book value of $5, what happens to BCI & Co.’s balance sheet? • Assets • Cash will decrease $10 • Common Cents’ assets of $5 will be added • Goodwill will increase $5 to balance out the transaction
The Balance Sheet Microsoft Case Study
The Balance Sheet Microsoft Case Study • Who here uses Google? • Who here uses Yahoo? • Does anyone use… Bing? • aQuantive was been never made a penny for Microsoft • In 2012, Microsoft was forced to admit that their $6B of goodwill was worth almost nothing • In other words, Microsoft “wrote down” the worthless goodwill
The Balance Sheet Microsoft Case Study