Definitions [4]
Definition: Financial Statement Analysis
- "Financial analysis consists in separating facts according to some definite plan, arranging them in groups according to certain circumstances and then presenting them in a convenient and easily read and understandable form.'' - Finney and Miller
- "Financial statement analysis is largely a study ofrelationships among the various financial factors in a business, as disclosed by a single set of statements and a study of the trends of these factors as shown in a series of statements." - John N. Myres
Definition: Financial Statements
- "Financial Statements are the end product of financial accounting prepared by the accounts of a business enterprise that purport to reveal the financial position of the enterprise, the result of its recent activities and an analysis of what has been done with earnings." - Smith and Ashburne
- "The Financial Statements are a summary of accounts of a business enterprise, the Balance Sheet showing the assets, liabilities and capital as on a certain date and income statement showing the results, i.e., profit or loss for the period." - John N. Myer
- "The Statements which are prepared by the business to find out profitability, efficiency, solvency, growth of business to judge the financial strength and status are called as Financial Statements."
Definition: Comparative Statement
- Comparative Statements or Comparative Financial Statements mean a comparative study of individual items or components of financial statements, i.e., Balance Sheet and Statement of Profit & Loss of two or more years of the enterprise itself.
- Statement showing financial data for two or more than two years placed aside by side to facilitate comparisons are called Comparative Financial Statement.
Definition: Common-Size Statement
- "Common-size Statements are accounting statements expressed in percentage of some base rather than rupees." - Kohler
- Common-size Statements are the Statements which show the relationship of different items of financial statements with some common item (base) by expressing each item as a percentage of that common base.
Formulae [1]
Absolute Change
Absolute Change = Current Year - Previous Year
Key Points
Key Points: Financial Statement Analysis
- Meaning: Study of financial data to understand profit, performance, solvency, and efficiency.
- Tools: Comparative & Common-size Statements, Cash Flow, Ratio Analysis.
- Purpose/Use: Helps assess trends, make decisions on investment, credit, dividends, and compare firms.
- Users: Management, investors, creditors, banks, govt., employees, etc.
- Limitations: Based on past data, may be biased, ignores price changes & qualitative factors, affected by window dressing.
Key Points: Financial Statements
- Meaning & Parts: Show a business’s profit and financial position. Include Balance Sheet, P&L A/c, Cash Flow, Equity Statement, and Notes.
- Purpose: Provide a true and fair view to help users make informed decisions.
- Features: Based on past data, in monetary terms. A balance sheet is for a date; a P&L is for a period. Must be verifiable, relevant, understandable, and comparable.
- Nature: Influenced by facts, accounting concepts, conventions, standards, and judgments.
- Legal Requirement: As per the Companies Act, 2013, companies must prepare them yearly in the prescribed format (Schedule III).
Format: Comparative Income Statement
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF PROFIT & LOSS
for the year ended 31st March....
| Particulars | Note No. | Figures for the Current Year | Figures for the Previous Year |
Absolute Change (Increase/Decrease) |
Percentage (Increase/Decrease) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
| A | B | (A - B) = C | \[\frac{C}{B}\times100=D\] | ||
| ₹ | ₹ | ₹ | ₹ | ||
| I. Revenue from Operations | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| II. Add: Other Incomes | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| III. Total Revenue(I + II) | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| IV. Less: Expenses | |||||
| - Cost of Materials Consumed | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| - Purchase of Stock in Trade | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| - Changes in Inventories of Finished Goods, Work-in-Progress and Stock in Trade | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| - Employee Benefit Expenses | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| - Finance Costs | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| - Depreciation and Amortization Expense | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| - Other Expenses | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| Total Expenses | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| V. Profit before Tax (III – IV) | ... | ... | ... | ... | |
| VI. Less: Tax | (...) | (...) | (...) | (...) | |
| VII. Profit after Tax (V – VI) | ... | ... | ... | ... |
Key Points: Comparative Financial Statement
- Meaning: Comparative Statements present financial data of two or more years side‑by‑side to show changes in amount and percentage.
- Types: Intra‑firm comparison compares the same firm over different years, while Inter‑firm comparison compares different firms.
- Uses: They simplify financial data, show trends, identify strengths and weaknesses, help compare with industry performance, and assist in forecasting.
- Limitations: They are based on past data, affected by estimates and personal judgement, ignore qualitative factors, do not consider price level changes, and are unreliable if accounting policies differ.
- Formats: Information can be shown as absolute changes, percentage changes, ratios, averages, and through comparative Balance Sheet and Profit & Loss statements.
Key Points: Common-Size Statement
- Common-size statements show each financial item as a percentage of a common base.
- They are used in the Balance Sheet and Income Statement for better comparison.
- The main purpose is to compare data, analyse trends, and understand financial relationships.
- Each item is shown in actual figures and as a percentage of the base amount.
- They help in tracking changes, identifying trends, and assessing business efficiency.
Key Points: Trend Analysis
- Trend Percentage Analysis helps compare financial data over several years.
- It shows the direction of change (increase or decrease) in financial items.
- Helps assess favourable or unfavourable trends in business performance.
- Useful for making future forecasts and decisions.
- Any year can be taken as the base year (value = 100); other years are shown as a percentage of it.
