Learn the 25 keys to unlocking the powerful and useful information buried in corporate financial statements, including understanding balance sheets and income statements, defining accrual accounting, and valuing costs of goods sold, inventory and cash flow. Analyzing Financial Statements is part of The New York Times Pocket MBA Series, a reference series easily accessible to all businesspersons, from first-level managers to the executive suite.
Not sure why this is getting so low reviews. It’s a short and informative book that is a friendly introduction to accounting rules and explains the why behind concepts. Very dated as it references 25 year old FASB directives, but the accounting wisdom never changes.
I learned about certain nuggets of reading financial statements, such as the pooling vs purchase approach of acquisitions, LIFO reserves, and discretion that management has in breaking up segments based on OI or NI.
I found this to be pretty bad. If you really know nothing about financial statements this will not help you. It goes fairly quickly into advanced territory before covering the basics. I'm unsure what the purpose of this recording was.
In any case, if you want to know about financial statements look no further than Khan Academy. Far better.
This is merely a summary of some of the important points in a typical Accounting 101 class, but not terribly useful to those who have already taken that type of class.