What the financial statement can do for shareholders? This is a common question when it comes down to do some investment to the company you own or you’re part of it. Let’s see first what the financial statements are.
Financial statement provides a glance of the company from a period of time, from operations, cash flow, and overall conditions. In every statement includes line by line items as well as total amount that help to read the health of the company. When the Shareholders have those statements they now can make informed decisions about their equity investments, especially when it comes time to vote on corporate matters.
There are a variety of tools shareholders have at their disposal to make these equity evaluations. In order to make better decisions, it is important for them to analyze their stocks using a variety of measurements, rather than just a few. Some of the metrics available include profitability ratios, liquidity ratios, debt ratios, efficiency ratios, and price ratios.
3 Financial statements those are very important for the shareholders
- Balance Sheet
The balance sheet shows a company’s assets (what they own), liabilities (what they owe), and stockholders’ equity (or ownership) at a given moment.
- Income Statement
The income statement reports the revenue generated from sales, the operating expenses involved in creating that revenue as well as other costs, such as taxes and interest expense on any debt on the balance sheet. The net amount or the bottom line of the income statement is the net income or the profit for the period. Net income is revenue minus all of the costs of doing business.
- Cash Flow Statement
The cash flow statement (CFS) measures the cash generated for a period, including all of the transactions that added to or subtracted from cash. Cash flow is important because it shows how much cash is available to meet short-term obligations, invest in the company, or to pay dividends to shareholders. Dividends are typically cash payments to shareholders as a perk for investing the company.
Financial Ratios
Financial ratios help investors break down the enormous amount of financial data that’s reported by companies. A ratio is merely a metric to help analyze the data and make useful comparisons with other companies and other reporting periods. Financial ratio analysis analyzes specific financial line-items within a company’s financial statements to provide insight as to how well the company is performing. Ratios determine profitability, a company’s indebtedness, the effectiveness of management, and operational efficiency. It’s important to consider that the results from financial ratios are often interpreted differently by investors. Although financial ratio analysis provides insight into a company, they should be used in tandem with other metrics and evaluated against the overall economic backdrop. Below are some of the most common financial ratios that investors use to interpret a company’s financial statements.
- Profitability Ratios
Profitability ratios are a group of financial metrics that show how well a company generates earnings compared to its associated expenses. However, investors should take care not to make a general comparison. Instead, they will get a better sense of how well a company is doing by comparing ratios of a similar period. For example, comparing the fourth quarter of this year with the same quarter from last year will net a better result.
- Return on Equity
Return on equity, or ROE, is a common profitability ratio used by many investors to calculate a company’s ability to generate income from shareholders’ equity or investments. Companies issue shares of stock to raise capital and use the money to invest in the company. Shareholders’ equity is the amount that would be returned to shareholders if a company’s assets were liquidated, and all debts were paid off. The higher the return or ROE, the better the company’s performance since it generated more money per each dollar of investment in the company.
- Operating Margin
Operating profit margin evaluates the efficiency of a company’s core financial performance. Operating income is the revenue generated from a company’s core business operations. Although operating margin is the profit from core operations, it doesn’t include expenses such as taxes and interest on debt. As a result, operating margin provides insight as to how well a company’s management is running the company since it excludes any earnings due to ancillary or exogenous events. For example, a company might sell an asset or a division and generate revenue, which would inflate earnings. Operating margin would exclude that sale. Ultimately, the operating profit is the portion of revenue that can be used to pay shareholders, creditors, and taxes.
- Liquidity Ratios
Liquidity ratios help shareholders determine how well a company handles its cash flow and short-term debts without needing to raise any extra capital from external sources, such as a debt offering.
- Current Ratio
The most commonly used liquidity ratio is the current ratio, which reflects current assets divided by liabilities, giving shareholders an idea of the company’s efficiency in using short-term assets to cover short-term liabilities. Short-term assets would include cash and accounts receivables, which is money owed to the company by customers. Conversely, current liabilities would include inventory and accounts payables, which are short-term debts owed by the company to suppliers. Higher current ratios are a good indication the company manages its short-term liabilities well and generates enough cash to run its operation smoothly. The current ratio generally measures if a company can pay its debts within a 12-month period. It can also be useful in providing shareholders with an idea of the ability a company possesses to generate cash when needed.
- Debt Ratios
Debt ratios indicate a company’s debt situation and whether they can manage their outstanding debt as well as the debt servicing costs, such as interest. Debt includes borrowed funds from banks but also bonds issued by the company. Bonds are purchased by investors where companies receive the money from the bonds upfront. When the bonds come due–called the maturity dates–the company must pay back the amount borrowed. If a company has too many bonds coming due in a specific period or time of the year, there may not be enough cash being generated to pay the investors. In other words, it’s important to know that a company can pay its interest due on their debt, but also it must be able to meet its bond maturity date obligations.
- Debt-to-Equity Ratio
The debt-to-equity ratio measures how much financial leverage a company has, which is calculated by dividing total liabilities by stockholders’ equity. A high debt-to-equity ratio indicates a company has vigorously funded its growth with debt. However, it’s important to compare the debt-to-equity ratios of companies within the same industry. Some industries are more debt-intensive since they need to buy equipment or expensive assets such as manufacturing companies. On the other hand, other industries might have little debt, such as software or marketing companies.
- Interest-Coverage Ratio
The interest coverage ratio measures the ease with which a company handles interest on its outstanding debt. A lower interest coverage ratio is an indication the company is heavily burdened by debt expenses.
- Efficiency Ratios
Efficiency ratios show how well companies manage assets and liabilities internally. They measure the short-term performance of a company and whether it can generate income using its assets.
- Inventory Turnover
The inventory or asset turnover ratio reveals the number of times a company sells and replaces its inventory in a given period. The results from this ratio should be used in comparison to industry averages. Low ratio values indicate low sales and excessive inventory, and therefore, overstocking. High ratio values commonly indicate strong sales and good inventory management.
- Valuation Ratios
Price ratios focus specifically on a company’s stock price and its perceived value in the market. The price/earnings (or P/E) ratio is an evaluation metric comparing the current share price of a company’s stock with its per-share earnings. Higher P/E values indicate investors expect continued future growth in earnings. However, a P/E that’s too high could indicate that the stock price is too high relative to the earnings or profit being generated. Investors use the P/E ratio to evaluate whether the stock price is fairly valued, overvalued, or undervalued. The P/E ratio is most helpful when compared to historical P/Es of the same company and companies within the same industry.
- Dividend Yield
The dividend yield ratio shows the amount in dividends a company pays out yearly in relation to its share price. The dividend yield provides investors with the return on investment from dividends alone. Dividends are important because many investors, including retirees, look for investments that provide steady income. Dividend income can help offset, at least in part, losses that might occur from owning the stock. Essentially, the dividend yield ratio is a measurement for the amount of cash flow received for each dollar invested in equity.
The Bottom Line. There is no one indicator that can adequately assess a company’s financial position and potential growth. That is why financial statements are so important for shareholders and market analysts alike. These metrics (along with many others) can be calculated using the figures released by a company on its financial statements.