Great business book for non-finance people!
- Whether you’re running your own business or working for an organization, it’s important to have financial intelligence.
- Finance and Accounting is more art than science. An accountant must make lots of judgments and decisions such as when to recognize a revenue, and how to categorize an expense, and so on. Sometimes companies group lots of losses on one quarter to make the next quarters look better. Sometimes companies recognize revenue that shouldn’t be recognized yet. At the end, they can’t put something that is not there, but they can skew the numbers and their categorization to make the company look better than it actually is. This is done sometimes to avoid share price from dropping, but not for long.
- A revenue should be recognized at the time of delivering the product/service not at time of signing the contract and not at time of receiving the payment from the customer. If the service is spread over time (for example support service for 12 months), then the revenue should also be spread on these months.
- The Income Statement shows revenue, expenses, and profit for a period of time. It’s also called a profit and loss statement (P&L). The bottom line of income statement is net profit, also known as net income.
- Operating Expenses are the costs required to keep the business going from day to day. They include salaries, benefits, and insurance costs, among a host of other items. Operating expenses are listed on the income statement and are subtracted from revenue to determine profit.
- Capital Expenditures (CAPEX, الإنفاق الرأسمالي) is the purchase of an item that’s considered a long term investment, such as computer systems and equipment and machines and buildings. Operating expenses show up on the income statement, and thus reduce profit. However, capital expenditure show up on the balance sheet; only the depreciation of a piece of capital equipment appears on the income statement.
- An accrual is the portion of a revenue or expense item that is recorded in a particular time span. Product development costs, for instant, are likely to be spread over several accounting periods, and so a portion of the total cost will be accrued each month. The purpose of accruals is to match costs to revenues in a given time period as accurately as possible.
- Allocations are apportionment of costs to different departments or activities within a company. For instant, overhead costs such as the CEO’s salary and HR department and Finance department are often allocated to the company’s operating unit.
- Let’s say that you have worked on developing a product on June and it was launched in July. The accountant needs to decide how to accrue your salary and where to allocate it. He needs to make an assumption regarding if you have helped with producing the first batch of products. If much of your salary was put under development cost and not under product cost, it would reflect to the CEO concerns on the risks related to developing a new product and also it will reflect product costs cheaper than the actual cost which could lead to the product being priced less than the cost. And vice versa. Indeed, accountants must make artful assumptions and decisions.
- If product costs go up, gross profit goes down. Gross profit is a is a key measure for assessing product profitability. Development costs, however, go into R&D, which is included in the operating expense section of the income statement and doesn’t affect gross profit at all.
- Depreciation is the method accountants use to allocate the cost if equipment and other assets to the total cost of products and services as shown on the income statement. It is based on the same idea as accruals: we want to match as closely as possible the costs of our products and services with what was sold. Most capital investments other than land are depreciated. Accountants attempt to spread the cost if the expenditure over the useful life of the item.
- Goodwill comes into play when one company acquires another company. It is the difference between the net assets acquired (that is, the fair market value of the assets less the assumed liabilities) and the amount of money the acquiring company pays for them. For example, if a company’s net assets are valued at $1 million and the acquirer pays $3 million, then goodwill of $2 million goes onto the acquirer’s balance sheet. That $2 million reflects all the value that is not reflected in the acquiree’s tangible assets. For example, its name, reputation, and so on.
- The balance sheet reflects the assets, liabilities, and owners’ equity at a point in time. In other words, it shows, on a specific day, what the company owned, what it owed, and how much it was worth. The balance sheet is called such because it balances. Assets always must equal liabilities plus owners’ equity. A financially savvy manager knows that all the income statements ultimately flow to the balance sheet.
- Profit is based on revenue, and revenue is recognized when a product or service is delivered, not when the bill is paid. So the profit is often no more than a promise. Customers have not paid yet, so the revenue number does not reflect real money. If everything goes well, the company will eventually collect its receivables and will have cash corresponding to that profit. In the meantime, it doesn’t. Sometimes a highly profitable company can be tight on cash and can’t expand on expenses.
- The income statement measures the sales and expenses, it doesn’t reflect the cash flow. The income statement is an estimate and it’s not 100% accurate.
- If an ink-and-toner supplier buys a truckload of cartridges in June to resell to customers over the next several months, it does not record the cost of all those cartridges in June. Rather, it records the cost of each cartridges when the cartridge is sold. The reason is the matching principle which is a fundamental accounting rule for preparing an income statement. It simply states: “Match the cost with its associated revenue to determine profits in a given period of time”. In other words, one of the accountants’ primary jobs is to figure out and properly record all the costs incurred in generating sales.
- The income statement tries to measure whether the products and services that a company provides are profitable when everything is added up. It’s the accountants’ best effort to show the sales the company generated during a given time period, the costs incurred in making those sales (including the costs of operating the business for that span of time), and the profit, if any, that is left over. A sales manager needs to know what kinds of profits he and his team are generating so that he can make decisions about discounts, terms, which customers to pursue, and so on. A marketing manager needs to know which products are most profitable so that those can be emphasized in any marketing campaigns.
- Over time, the income statement and the cash flow statement in a well-run company will track one another. Profit will be turned into cash. However, just because a company is making a profit in any given time period doesn’t mean it will have the cash to pay its bills. Profit is always and estimate. And you can’t spend estimates.
- It happened many times before that a company ships products to their partners at the end of the quarter just to mark these shipments as sales. This is known as “channel stuffing”. What happens is that the partners send back the shipments that they didn’t even ask for.
- Gross profit is revenue minus cost of goods and services, it reflects the profitability of your products. Operating profit is gross profit minus the operating cost, it reflects the profitability of the operation of your business over all. Net profit is operating profit minus taxes and interests. Net profit is what is left over after everything is subtracted.
- Contribution margin is sales minus variable costs. It tells you how profitable a product is and it tells you how much of your product you need to sell in order to cover the fixed cost. It also helps with the pricing of the product. This area is also related to Product Management.
- No matter what’s your company style of recording revenue and costs, what matters is the consistency from year to year.
- The above has focused on the income statement. As for the balance sheet, it is a statement of what a business owns and what it owes at a particular point in time. The difference between what a company owns and what it owes represents equity.
- Equity is the shareholders’ “stake” in the company as measured by accounting rules. It’s also called the company’s book value. In accounting terms, equity is always assets minus liabilities; it is also the sum of all capital pain in my shareholders plus any profits earned by the company since its inception minus dividends paid out to the shareholders.
- Over time, the equity section of the balance sheet shows the accumulation of profits or losses left in the business.
- The rule of the balance sheet goes as follows: assets = liabilities + owners’ equity
- Assets consist of cash and stocks (liquid assets) and equipments and lands and goodwill. A lot of art goes into estimating the current value of non-liquid assets.
- Accounts Receivable is the amount customers owe the company. Revenue is a promise to pay, so accounts receivable includes all the promises that haven’t yet been collected. Why is this an asset? Because all or most of these commitments will convert to cash and soon will belong to the company. It’s like a loan from the company to its customers.
- Sometimes a balance sheet includes an item labeled “allowance for bad debt” that is subtracted from accounts receivable. This is the accountants’ estimate -usually based on past experience- of the dollars owed by customers who didn’t pay their bills. In many companies, subtracting a bad-debt allowance provides a more accurate reflection of the value of those accounts receivable.
- Land doesn’t wear out, so accountants don’t record any depreciation each year. But buildings and equipment do. The point of accounting deprecation, however, isn’t to estimate what the buildings and equipment are worth right now; the point is to allocate the investment in the asset over the time it is used to generate revenue and profit (the matching principle). The depreciation charge is a way of ensuring that the income statement accurately reflects the true cost of producing goods or delivering services.
- If a company buys another company for $5 million. If you pay cash, the asset called cash in your balance sheet will decrease by $5 million. That means other assets have to rise by $5 million. If the bought company physical assets are worth $2 million, that doesn’t mean that you made a bad deal. A brand name like Coke Cola is worth much more that its physical assets. The difference of $3 million is to be marked as goodwill.
- If you paid for rent of $60,000 for 12 months in advance and recording it as $5,000 each month as per the matching principle, where did the other $55,000 cash go in the balance sheet? It gets marked as prepaid asset (you own the place for the upcoming 11 months) and decreases each month by $5,000 and gets reflected in the income statement as $5000 cost of operational cost.
- Should you mark a marketing campaign cost of $1 million as one time cost or do you divide it into the upcoming 24 months claiming that the impact of the campaign would extend over that period? It’s an art more than a science.
- Deferred revenue gets marked as part of liability. It represents money received for products or services that have not yet been delivered. Once the product or service has been delivered, the corresponding revenue will be included in the income statement and it will come off the balance sheet. Industries where you might see deferred revenue on the balance sheet includes airlines (you pay before you fly) and project- based businesses.
- Retained earnings are the profits that have been reinvested in the business instead of being paid out in dividends. Investors don’t like it when a company retain earnings as cash that is not being invested anywhere and they pressure the company to at least make it into dividends.
- What the balance sheet is balancing? On one side are the assets, which is what the company owns. On the other side are the liabilities and equity, which show how the company obtained what it owns. You can also look at it this way: the assets consist of two parts, one which needs to be used to pay for the liabilities and one is capital and profits for the owners. The balance sheet lists nicely all the company assets in one side, and in the other side it lists the owners of these assets.
- If you open a company and put $50,000 in cash. Then in assets side there will be $50,000 as cash, and in owners’ equity side there will also be amount of $50,000. Let’s say you took a loan of $10,000, now the assets side includes $60,000, so from where this came from? We simply add $10,000 in liabilities side. Remember, transactions affect both sides of the balance sheet.
- Profits in the income statement gets reflected in the balance sheet as equity. On the assets side, it gets reflected as either cash or accounts receivable.
- When a company buys a piece of capital equipment, the cost doesn’t show up on the income statement; rather, the new asset appears on the balance sheet, and only the depreciation appears on the income statement as a charge against profit.
- Many profitable companies close down in their first year. The reason is that they would run out of cash. The more sales you’re generating the more expenses you’re paying for the materials, all while not yet turning the accounts receivable into cash.
- If a company is profitable but short on cash, then it needs financial expertise, someone capable of lining up additional financing. If a company has cash but is unprofitable, it needs operational expertise, meaning someone capable of bringing down costs or generating additional revenue without adding costs.
- There is much less room for manipulation of the numbers on the cash flow statement than on income statement and balance sheet. Less room doesn’t mean “no room”. For example, if a company is trying to show good cash flow in a particular quarter, it may delay paying vendors or employee bonuses until the next quarter. Unless a company delays payments over and over -eventually vendors who don’t get paid will stop providing goods and services- the effects are significant only in the short term.
- You can calculate a cash flow statement just by looking at the income statement and two balance sheets.
- Reconciliation, in a financial context, means getting the cash line on a company’s balance sheet to match the actual cash the company has in the bank.
- Operating lease is widely used in the airline industry and others. Rather than buying equipment such as an airplane outright, a company lease it from an investor. The lease payments count as an expense on the income statement, but there is no asset and no debt related to that asset on a company’s books. Some companies that are already over-leveraged are willing to pay a premium to lease equipment just to keep the ratios of interest coverage (operating profit / annual interest charges) and debt-to-equity ratio (total liabilities / shareholders’ equity) in the area that bankers and investors like to see.
- To know how good your company is at collecting their money, divide average account receivable by the revenue then divide by 365 (the number of days in a year).
- To know how tight your company is with using inventory (the tighter the better), divide average inventory by COGS per day. Walmart’s ratio is 47. This means that inventory gets sold on average after a month and a half. That’s a good average in super market industry. For Target, it is 74 meaning that it takes two months and a half for them to sell an item as soon as it gets into the inventory.
- Numbers that are important to investors:
- 1. Revenue growth from one year to another
- 2. Earnings per share (EPS)
- 3. Earning before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) - a strong healthy company should experience growth un EBITDA over time. Also it is often used in valuing businesses. Many companies are bought and sold at a price that us an agreed-upon multiple of EBITDA.
- 4. Free cash flow - divide cash flow by EBITDA, if the ratio is low it may indicate that the company is trying to make its EBITDA stronger than it is.
- 5. Return on total capital, or return on equity
- 6. Market cap (the number of shares multiplied by the share value)
- 7. Share price to earning - usually it’s between 16 and 18. Companies with higher ratios are considered to have high growth potential.
- Companies with high market cap and high share price to earnings are healthy and their jobs are more secure, and there is more opportunity to grow in the company. And the company is more likely to get loans when needed and is more likely to survive tough economies.
- These above two numbers depend on market perceptions, which in turn are driven by: the company’s current financial performance + the company’s prospects for growth in the future + the company’s anticipated cash flows in the future + the predictability of its performance, that is, the degree of risk involved + investors’ assessments of the expertise of a company’s management and the skills of its employees
- Also there are other factors, such as the overall state if the economy, the condition of the stock market in general, the level of speculative fervor, etc.
- At any given point in time, investors will disagree about a company’s “true” value, which is why some are willing to buy shares at a particular price and some are willing to sell them.
- Investors understand that investment is a game of psychology as well as of economics. As the economist John Maynard Keynes once pointed out, buying stocks is like trying to anticipate who will win a beauty contest. You want to choose not the person who you think is the most beautiful but the person you think everyone else will see as most beautiful. [note: this is the opposite of what Warren Buffett is suggesting which is to invest in companies that are underrated and that you wouldn’t mind investing in them for very long time]
- Astute management of the balance sheet is like financial magic. It allows a company to improve its financial performance even without boosting sales or lowering costs. Better balance sheet management makes a business more efficient at converting inputs to outputs and ultimately to cash. Companies that can generate more cash in less time have greater freedom of action; they aren’t so dependent on outside investors or lenders.
- Working Capital is the money a company needs to finance its daily operations. Accountants usually measure it by adding up a company’s cash, inventory, and accounts receivable, and then subtracting short-term debts. The longer a company’s DSO (days outstanding receivables), the more working capital is required to run the business. If your daily sales are $1 million, then you’ll get additional $1 million in cash for each day you cut from the DSO.
- Companies who pay their vendors as early as possible get greater support from these vendors. Vendors are usually small scale and they need the cash flow to function comfortably. Be their champion, and they will work hard for you.
- Educating the staff on finance and accounting, increasing their financial intelligence, is important. It always increases staff dedication and efficiency. When they understand the “why” behind management decisions, they will commit to it, instead of seeing management like bunch of guys who don’t know what they’re doing. Educate with the real numbers. Even private companies can do that by scaling down the numbers but keeping the patterns.