Archive for the s.Financial Statements Category

In an annual report whether for a listed company or not, there is usually a sectioncategory titled:

“Financial Statements”. Hence, it is important to understand what really comprises the schedules/statements in a Financial Statement.

THE COMPONENTS OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS are:-

Balance Sheet

Income Statement

A statement showing either:

  • All changes in equity, or
  • Changes in equity other than those arising from capital transactions with owners and distribution to owners.

Accounting policies and explanatory notes.

Voluntary disclosure, outside the financial statements, a financial review on the main features of financial performance and financial position and the principal uncertainties:

  • Main factors and influences on performances, changes in environment, enterprise’s responses, policy on investments and dividends;
  • Sources of funding, policy on gearing and risk management;
  • Strengths and resources whose value is not reflected in the balance sheet.

Further to Part 1 where we understand what is an Income Statement. This article looks at what are inside the Income Statements:

COMPONENTS IN THE INCOME STATEMENT:

Net Revenue A

Cost of Goods B

Gross Margin C=A-B

NET REVENUE:

NET REVENUE are the list prices of the goods and/services less any discounts offered to the customer to induce purchase.

Don’t forget that these revenue is recognized in the period in which goods and services are sold, not necessarily the period in which cash is received which follow strictly to the matching and accrual accounting concept.

 

COST OF GOODS SOLD

COST OF GOODS comprise the TOTAL COST OF THE PRODUCT BEING SOLD.

Originally, when the manufacturer made the product, all the cost related to the product are added to the value of the inventory. When the product is sold, these costs of inventory are then expensed through the Income Statement as cost of goods sold.

GROSS PROFIT MARGIN

GROSS PROFIT MARGIN is simply Net Revenues less Cost of Goods Sold

The higher the gross margin, it means that there is a higher MARK-UP on the costs of Goods Sold .

Of course, a higher gross profit margin is favourable.

The higher the gross profit margin, it means that the company can absorb more overheads and can sustain longer when there is a period of recession where business dropped

From the bookkeeping perspective, once we have put in all the relevant adjustments, we can then from the post adjusted trial balance to extract/prepare the Income Statement.

Before preparing even this Income Statement ( which was previously called by many as Profit & Loss Account/Statement), we need to know what really is this Income Statement.

Let now look at the Income Statement:

AN INCOME STATEMENT:-

Reports ONLY the PROFITABILITY of a business

Unlike a Balance Sheet, which is a snapshot of a point of time, Income Statement reflects the profitability of a business FOR A SPECIFIC PERIOD OF TIME (monthly, quarterly or yearly).

In the Income Statement, MATCHING/ACCRUALS/REVENUE RECOGNITION concepts/principles will prevails:

 

Revenue is recognized in the period in which goods and services are sold, not necessarily the period in which cash is received.

Expense is recognized in the period in which goods and services are used, not necessarily the period in which cash is paid.

A few years ago, this Income Statement is called PROFIT & LOSS Statement.

Nowadays, it is called Income Statement or Earnings Statement

The basic equation for the Income Statement is:

Revenue less Costs & Expenses = Income

When Revenue is MORE than Costs & Expenses = Income/Profit/Earnings

( The term Income or Profit or Earnings has the same meaning)

When Revenue is LESS than Costs & Expenses = Loss

 

 

The Normal Format Of An Income Statement is as follows:

INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE PERIOD FROM 1/1/06 TO 31/12/06

 

Net Revenue                   A

Cost of Goods                  B

Gross Margin                   C=A-B

General & Administrative   D

Sales & Marketing            E

Research & Development  F

Operating Expenses         G= D+E+F

Income From Operations  H =C-G ( Gross margin less Operating Expenses)

Interest                          I

Income before taxes        J=H-I

Net Income after taxes     K

It is important to let those who prepare the books of account to understand what the users of financial statements would want to see of a good quality financial statements whether it is Income Statement, Balance Sheet & Cash Flow Statements.

Basically, the final “output” which is the financial statements should have the following qualitative characteristics:

UNDERSTANDABLE & USEFUL

  • Accounting information should be readily understandable to the intended users of the information.

  • This is a function of both the intended users and the intended uses of the information. Accounting systems that define either the users or uses narrowly may justify more complex information requirements and standards. Accounting systems that envision a broad body of users and/or uses would tend towards less complexity in published information and standards.

  • Typically the belief that, for information to be understandable, information contained in the various financial disclosures and reporting must be transparent (i.e., clearly disclosed and readily discernable).

 

RELEVANT

The information should be relevant to the decision-making users of the information. It should make a difference in their decisions. Typically, this means the information must be:

  • Timely
  • Have predictive value
  • Provide useful feedback on past decisions

RELIABLE

The information should be reliable and dependable. This usually includes the concepts of:

  • Representational faithfulness - the information represents what it claims to represent. For example, if the reported value of a common stock holding purports to be the current market value, that value should be approximately what the stock could be sold for by the company holding it.

  • Verifiability - another person or entity should be able to recreate the reported value using the same information that the reporting entity had.

  • Completeness - the reported information should not be missing a material fact or consideration that would make the reported information misleading.

  • The concept of neutrality is sometimes incorporated into the concept of reliability.

 

COMPARABLE AND CONSISTENT

  • For accounting information to be usable, it must allow for comparisons across time and across competing interests (such as competing companies or industries).

 

  • This leads to a need for some consistency, wherever such comparisons are to be expected. For example, comparisons of two companies would be very difficult and potentially misleading if one discounts all its liabilities while the other discounts none of its liabilities.

UNBIASED

  • Information that is biased can be misleading.

  • Biased information is not useful unless the users understand the bias, any bias is consistently applied across years/firms/industries, and the users can adjust the reported results to reflect their own desired bias.

  • When faced with uncertainty, there is a need to either require reporting of unbiased values accompanied with sufficient disclosure, or require the reporting of biased (prudent or œconservative) values with the bias determined in a predictable, consistent fashion.

 

COST-BENEFIT EFFECTIVE

  • General understanding that the development of accounting information consumes resources.

 

  • As such, the cost of producing such information should be reasonable in relation to the expected benefit.

 

  • Use the materiality accounting rule - may not have to be fully followed for immaterial items if full compliance would result in unwarranted higher costs.

 

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