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How
to Interpret and Profit from Financial Statements
Peter
Leeds
http://www.pennystocks.com
Peter
Leeds, one of North America's leading Investment Coaches, is
a self-made millionaire who has created his fortunes on the
stock markets. He has also empowered thousands of individuals
to do the same. His personal success and incredible ability
to consistently pick money-making stocks has earned him a loyal
following of successful investors and has generated significant
attention from the financial world.
Financial statements are a useful tool for judging the health
of a company, and for comparing it to its competitors. They
show what the company owes and owns, the profits or loses it
has made over a given period, and how their position has changed
since their last statement. Generally if you can tell which
direction a company is heading in, you can also forecast future
stock prices with some accuracy.
Gaining a basic knowledge of financial statements, and applying
this knowledge when choosing or assessing investments can help
you pick tomorrow's winning stocks, while avoiding tomorrow's
losers.
Of course, financial statement analysis will not always factor
in significant news events, unexpected incidents, changes in
management, and other factors which may influence share prices,
but it provides a starting point from which to gauge the present
value of shares, independent of future occurrences.
The following report details some simple financial statement
explanation and analysis methods. Although the topic can get
much deeper and more complex, this article is designed to give
investors the ability to understand the numbers and simpler
of financial ratios, and be able to use that knowledge to assist
them to make better decisions when doing their due diligence.
Balance Sheet
The balance sheet shows a company's financial position at a
specific date, usually the last day of the company's fiscal
year for annual reports. One side of the balance sheet shows
what the company owns and has owing to it, called assets. The
other side represents liabilities, which are what the company
owes, and also has shareholders' equity, which represents the
excess of the company's assets over its liabilities. Shareholder's
equity is often referred to as book value.
Total assets are equal to the sum of the company's liabilities
plus the shareholders' equity. In other words, take away liabilities
from assets and the remainder is what value is owned by the
shareholders.
The Balance Sheet can be used to uncover the value of the company,
the debt load, and cash position.
Earnings Statement
Also called the Income Statement or Profit and Loss Statement,
it shows how much revenue a company received during the year
from the sale of its products and services, and the expenses
the company incurred due to wages, taxes, operating costs, etc...
The difference between the two is the company's profit or loss
for the year. The amount left over after taxes is the net earnings.
Net earnings are basically saying how much money the company
really' made over the course of the year. Some companies
can have low earnings if they used much of their money for research
and development, to acquire other companies, fuel aggressive
growth, move into new markets, etc, which is much more favorable
than if the company had low earnings because they didn't generate
many revenues, their expenses were too high, etc...
Statements of Changes in Financial Position
This shows how the company's financial position changed from
one year to the next. Also called the cash flow statement, this
details how the company generated and spent its cash during
the year.
This statement can be used in evaluating the liquidity and
solvency of a company, and to assess the ability of that company
to generate cash internally, to repay debts, to reinvest in
itself, etc...
Sources of Financial Reports
Certainly you can get financials from the companies themselves.
Most will gladly fax them to you, or mail you their latest quarterly
and annual reports.
However, a faster way to access the information can be by Internet.
For example, go to Yahoo.com and choose stock quotes. Enter
the ticker symbol for the company you are interested in, and
Yahoo will provide its most recent press releases, which will
include past quarterly and annual reports with the financial
statements. You can also check the previous reports to compare
which direction the company is moving in and look for trends
(i.e. increasing debt load, unpredictable earnings, decreasing
revenues, erratic revenues, etc...).
There are also many other Internet resources which provide
similar information, such as wsrn.com, bigcharts.com, (canada-stockwatch.com
for Canadian issues), etc...
Comparison Shopping
To familiarize yourself with some of the numbers, try looking
up the financials of three companies you own or are interested
in.
(Balance Sheet) Which of the companies has the greatest long
term debt load? Do any of the companies have greater current
liabilities than current assets? Compare the current share price
to the shareholder's equity (book value): is the share price
much greater or less than the book value?
(Earnings Statement) What were the revenues of the most recent
year (or quarter) and does the number represent an increase
or decrease from the previous period? How much money per share
did the company earn (or lose) in the most recent period?
(Statement of Changes in Financial Position) Has company debt
been increasing or decreasing? What was the greatest expense
the company incurred according to the statement?
Decision Making
Understand that financial statements can provide investors
with a partial fundamental snapshot of a company. They only
represent one piece of the puzzle. Remember that, while financial
statements can help investors compare several companies, comparison
is limited only to the numbers provided.
In other words, you can see that one company made money while
the other lost money, but you don't know which has the better
technical outlook (based on analysis of the trading chart),
which is a potential takeover target, which will have the best
future earnings, etc...
As well, the impact of financial statements tends to be long-term
as it relates to share prices. Four quarterly reports showing
increasing earnings may push the stock into an upward trend
as the market begins to recognize the fundamental improvements
of the underlying company, but one quarter of increasing earnings
may or may not have a significant impact on shares.
Therefore, most investors use financial statements as part
of a greater overall decision making process. Certainly, though,
an understanding of and familiarization with the data can benefit
any investor who takes the time to make educated trading decisions.
Important Points
Many growth companies don't need nor are expected to have positive
earnings. Instead, they generally accumulate debt as they focus
on research and development of new technologies, aggressively
move into new markets, fight for market share with competitors,
etc... Other companies with minimal growth prospects on the
other hand, have more importance placed on actual earnings,
lowering operational costs, etc...
Be sure to understand what numbers are important and unimportant
to a specific company based on their situation and the position
they are in. This can be done easily by going to wsrn.com and
doing an industry comparison on the company in question. Do
companies in the same industry seem to have positive earnings,
or is the focus on growth, research, etc... Are they a larger
or smaller company than the industry average, and are they growing
faster than the others?
Read the fine print to make sure the numbers you are reading
have been audited, rather than being just company estimates,
or unverified results. This generally is not something you need
to worry about with most exchange-listed companies, but it is
important practice.
Many annual statements will begin with positive news about
sales or revenue increases, or other positive comments, but
further reading reveals that the company actually lost more
money, increased debt, or had a poor quarter or year. For most
companies their financial statements are part of their promotional
material and they need to make the information sound as impressive
and positive as possible, even if the overall results were disappointing.
Be wary of one-time earnings or loses. For example, a company
may win a huge lawsuit settlement and the influx of money gives
them positive earnings for the quarter. However, how would they
have done when the one-time extraordinary is ignored? To learn
more about this please go to http://www.pennystockinsider.com.
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