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A LOOK AT THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS – HOW THEY RELATE TO EACH OTHER AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS. Topics. Levels of Financial Statements Example Statements (see handouts) Government-wide statements Fund level statements Statistical Section
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A LOOK AT THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS – HOW THEY RELATE TO EACH OTHER AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS Edward B. Peacock, CPA 214 356 0116 eddie@ebpeacockcpa.com
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Topics • Levels of Financial Statements • Example Statements (see handouts) • Government-wide statements • Fund level statements • Statistical Section • Financial Analysis – process of drawing meaning from financial statements • Identifying Available Resources • GAAP basis • Budgetary basis • General fund • Proprietary funds • Ratio Analysis
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Levels of Financial Statements • Government-wide financial statements • Measurement focus – economic resources • Basis of accounting - accrual basis • Statement of Net Assets – p11 - reports what the government owns and owes at the end of the fiscal year • Two columns - governmental activities and business-type activities – side by side comparison • Statement of Activities - p12-13 – reports financial results during a fiscal year
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Levels of Financial Statements • Fund level financial statements, p14-24 • Governmental funds, p14-15 • Modified accrual basis • Current assets and current liabilities • Reconciliations of modified accrual to full accrual basis, p16, p19 • Proprietary funds, W&S, Golf • Full accrual basis • Current assets and current liabilities are identified in the fund level SNA, p11, p20
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Levels of Financial Statements • Statistical Section • Typically presents information for the most recent 10 years • Usually is not audited • Contains tables of trends – help you understand how your gov’t’s finances have changed over time • Financial • Revenue capacity • Debt capacity • Demographic and economic information • Operating information
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Identifying Available Resources • Government-wide Statements • Restricted versus unrestricted net assets, p11 • Fund level statements • Governmental funds • Fund balance, p14 • Proprietary funds • Unrestricted net assets, p11, p21 • Working capital (current assets less current liabilities) • Frequently used in rate analysis • Cash basis, p23
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Restricted and Unrestricted Net Assets • Capital assets net of related debt, p11 • Cannot readily be sold and converted into cash • Restricted net assets • External restrictions on how resources may be used • Unrestricted net assets • Resources that don’t fall into the first two categories • Not necessarily liquid
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Fund Level Resources • Governmental Funds, p14 • Nonspendable – not a liquid resource • Restricted – externally restricted for a specific purpose • Special revenue funds • Capital projects funds • Debt service funds • Committed – appropriated by governing body • Assigned fund balance – can be unassigned • Unassigned – can be used as beginning resource in the budget
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Fund Level Resources • Proprietary Funds, p20-21 • Unrestricted Net Assets • Not necessarily liquid • Working capital • Roughly equivalent to fund balance (current assets less current liabilities) • Could be used as a beginning resource in the budget • Frequently used by rate analysts • Cash basis, p23-24 • Separate unrestricted cash from restricted in the cash flow statement
Edward B. Peacock, CPA General Fund - Unassigned Fund Balance Measures
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Working Capital - Proprietary Funds • A short term measure of the funds’ ability to meet the obligations that will come due over the next year • Current assets less current liabilities • A more stringent approach – compare only the most liquid assets, generally unrestricted cash and cash equivalents to current liabilities
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Proprietary Funds – Working Capital
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Proprietary Funds Expenditures – Budgetary Basis
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Proprietary Funds – Working Capital Measures
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Proprietary Funds – Unrestricted Cash
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Ratio Analysis • The act of converting the numbers in the FS into a form which specific decisions can be based • Are created by dividing one number into another • Financial story is not told with a single ratio, but with an accumulation of ratios and other information • If presented ratio information, be careful to ask how it was calculated • Always specify the components of the ratios used in your analyses
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Ratio Analysis • To give meaningful financial ratios, always place your ratios in context, i.e., • Compare to PY – improving, declining, holding steady? • Compare to other similar governments – higher, lower, roughly the same? • Is there a commonly accepted benchmark?
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Types of Ratios • Common-Size Ratios • $ Dollar Change • % Percentage Change • Short Term Focus – Liquidity • Current Ratio • Quick Ratio • Long Term Focus – Solvency • Debt to Assets Ratio • Debt to Net Assets • Coverage Ratios • Interest Coverage • Debt Service Coverage
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Common-Size Ratios • Serve two valuable purposes • Provide quick overview of finances • How they’ve changed since prior year • Can be applied to any kind of FS information • Percentage change – shows magnitude of change • Percentage distribution – shows portion of the total represented by individual elements
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Dollar Amount and Percentage Change
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Percentage Distribution
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Liquidity Ratios • Concerned with the ability to pay immediate obligations • Current ratio • Current assets / current liabilities • Quick ratio • Cash and cash equivalents / current liabilities
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Current and Quick Ratios
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Solvency Ratios • Leverage ratios • Measure the degree to which assets are financed through borrowing or other LT obligations • Debt to assets ratio • (total liabilities – deferred outflows) / (total assets – deferred inflows) • Debt to net assets (position) ratio • (total liabilities – deferred outflows) / total net position
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Debt to Assets/ Net Assets Ratios
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Coverage Ratios • Compare available resources with resource needs • Interest coverage • Cash flow from operations + interest expense / interest expense • Debt service coverage • Cash flow from operations + debt service / debt service
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Coverage Ratios
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Summary Analysis
Edward B. Peacock, CPA Questions? Eddie Peacock Edward B. Peacock, CPA 214 356 0116 eddie@ebpeacockcpa.com http://www.EBPeacockCPA.com