Analysis of Financial Statements: Answers To Selected End-Of-Chapter Questions
Analysis of Financial Statements: Answers To Selected End-Of-Chapter Questions
Analysis of Financial Statements: Answers To Selected End-Of-Chapter Questions
a. A liquidity ratio is a ratio that shows the relationship of a firms cash and other
current assets to its current liabilities. The current ratio is found by dividing current
assets by current liabilities. It indicates the extent to which current liabilities are
covered by those assets expected to be converted to cash in the near future. The
quick, or acid test, ratio is found by taking current assets less inventories and then
dividing by current liabilities.
b. Asset management ratios are a set of ratios that measure how effectively a firm is
managing its assets. The inventory turnover ratio is sales divided by inventories.
Days sales outstanding is used to appraise accounts receivable and indicates the
length of time the firm must wait after making a sale before receiving cash. It is
found by dividing receivables by average sales per day. The fixed assets turnover
ratio measures how effectively the firm uses its plant and equipment. It is the ratio of
sales to net fixed assets. Total assets turnover ratio measures the turnover of all the
firms assets; it is calculated by dividing sales by total assets.
c. Financial leverage ratios measure the use of debt financing. The debt ratio is the ratio
of total debt to total assets, it measures the percentage of funds provided by creditors.
The times-interest-earned ratio is determined by dividing earnings before interest and
taxes by the interest charges. This ratio measures the extent to which operating
income can decline before the firm is unable to meet its annual interest costs. The
EBITDA coverage ratio is similar to the times-interest-earned ratio, but it recognizes
that many firms lease assets and also must make sinking fund payments. It is found
by adding EBITDA and lease payments then dividing this total by interest charges,
lease payments, and sinking fund payments over one minus the tax rate.
d. Profitability ratios are a group of ratios, which show the combined effects of liquidity,
asset management, and debt on operations. The profit margin on sales, calculated by
dividing net income by sales, gives the profit per dollar of sales. Basic earning power
is calculated by dividing EBIT by total assets. This ratio shows the raw earning
power of the firms assets, before the influence of taxes and leverage. Return on total
assets is the ratio of net income to total assets. Return on common equity is found by
dividing net income into common equity.
e. Market value ratios relate the firms stock price to its earnings and book value per
share. The price/earnings ratio is calculated by dividing price per share by earnings
per share--this shows how much investors are willing to pay per dollar of reported
profits. The price/cash flow is calculated by dividing price per share by cash flow per
share. This shows how much investors are willing to pay per dollar of cash flow.
Market-to-book ratio is simply the market price per share divided by the book value
per share. Book value per share is common equity divided by the number of shares
outstanding.
Mini Case: 4 - 1
4-2
4-3
4-4
4-5
Mini Case: 4 - 2
4-6
being evaluated.
Firms within the same industry may employ different accounting techniques, which make
it difficult to compare financial ratios. More fundamentally, comparisons may be
misleading if firms in the same industry differ in their other investments. For example,
comparing Pepsico and Coca-Cola may be misleading because apart from their soft drink
business, Pepsi also owns other businesses such as Frito-Lay, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, and
KFC.
CA = $3,000,000;
CA - I
CA
= 1.5;
= 1.0;
CL
CL
CL = ?; I = ?
CA
= 1.5
CL
$3,000,000
= 1.5
CL
1.5 CL = $3,000,000
CL = $2,000,000.
CA - I
= 1.0
CL
$3,000,000 - I
= 1.0
$2,000,000
$3,000,000 - I = $2,000,000
I = $1,000,000.
4-2
4-3
Mini Case: 4 - 3
D 1
= 1 -
A A
E
D
1
= 1
A 2.4
D
= 0.5833 = 58.33%.
A
4-4
4-5
Mini Case: 4 - 4
E
A
E
A
E
A
D
A
NI
E
D
E
_
and
=1, so
A
NI
A
A
1
= 3% _
0.05
=
= 60% .
= 1 - 0.60 = 0.40 = 40% .
Alternatively,
ROE = ROA EM
5% = 3% EM
EM = 5%/3% = 5/3 = TA/E.
Take reciprocal:
E/TA = 3/5 = 60%;
therefore,
D/A = 1 - 0.60 = 0.40 = 40%.
Thus, the firms profit margin = 2% and its debt ratio = 40%.
4-6
$1,312,500
= 2.5.
$525,000
$1,312,500 + NP
= 2.0.
$525,000 + NP
Mini Case: 4 - 5
4-7
1.
Current assets
$810,000
= 3.0
= 3.0
Current liabilities
Current liabilities
Current liabilities = $270,000.
2.
3.
Current
assets
= Cash +
Marketable
Securities
Accounts
receivable
+ Inventories
Sales
Sales
= 6.0
= 6.0
Inventory
$432,000
Sales = $2,592,000.
5. DSO =
4-8
Accounts receivable
$258,000
= 36.33 days.
=
Sales/365
$2,592,000/ 365
4-9
Mini Case: 4 - 6
$655,000
$330,000
Industry
Average
= 1.98
2.0
DSO =
Accounts receivable
Sales/ 365
$336,000
$4,404.11
= 76 days 35 days
$1,607,500
$241,500
= 6.66
Sales
Fixed assets
$1,607,500
$292,500
= 5.50 12.1
Sales
Total assets
$1,607,500
$947,500
= 1.70
3.0
$27,300
$1,607,500
= 1.7%
1.2%
$27,300
$947,500
= 2.9%
3.6%
Sales
Inventory
Net income
Sales
Net income
Total assets
6.7
Industry
Firm Average
Net income
Common equity
Total debt
Total assets
$27,300
$361,000
$586,500
$947,500
= 7.6%
9.0%
= 61.9% 60.0%
Mini Case: 4 - 7
$947,500
= 7.6%.
$361,000
c. The firms days sales outstanding is more than twice as long as the industry average,
indicating that the firm should tighten credit or enforce a more stringent collection
policy. The total assets turnover ratio is well below the industry average so sales
should be increased, assets decreased, or both. While the companys profit margin is
higher than the industry average, its other profitability ratios are low compared to the
industry--net income should be higher given the amount of equity and assets.
However, the company seems to be in an average liquidity position and financial
leverage is similar to others in the industry.
d. If 2005 represents a period of supernormal growth for the firm, ratios based on this
year will be distorted and a comparison between them and industry averages will
have little meaning. Potential investors who look only at 2004 ratios will be misled,
and a return to normal conditions in 2006 could hurt the firms stock price.
4-10
Total liabilities
a. Here are the firms base case ratios and other data as compared to the industry:
Quick
Current
Inventory turnover
Days sales outstanding
Fixed assets turnover
Total assets turnover
Return on assets
Return on equity
Debt ratio
Profit margin on sales
EPS
Stock Price
P/E ratio
P/CF ratio
M/B ratio
Firm
0.8
2.3
4.8
37 days
10.0
2.3
5.9%
13.1
54.8
2.5
$4.71
$23.57
5.0
2.0
0.65
Industry
1.0
2.7
7.0
32 days
13.0
2.6
9.1%
18.2
50.0
3.5
n.a.
n.a.
6.0
3.5
n.a.
Comment
Weak
Weak
Poor
Poor
Poor
Poor
Bad
Bad
High
Bad
--Poor
Poor
--
The firm appears to be badly managed--all of its ratios are worse than the industry
averages, and the result is low earnings, a low P/E, P/CF ratio, a low stock price, and
a low M/B ratio. The company needs to do something to improve.
b. A decrease in the inventory level would improve the inventory turnover, total assets
turnover, and ROA, all of which are too low. It would have some impact on the
current ratio, but it is difficult to say precisely how that ratio would be affected. If the
lower inventory level allowed the company to reduce its current liabilities, then the
current ratio would improve. The lower cost of goods sold would improve all of the
profitability ratios and, if dividends were not increased, would lower the debt ratio
through increased retained earnings. All of this should lead to a higher market/book
ratio and a higher stock price.
Mini Case: 4 - 9