Financial statements (or financial report ) is a formal record of the financial activities and position of a business, person, or other entity. Relevant financial information is presented in a structured manner and in a form easy to understand. They typically include basic financial statements, accompanied by a management discussion and analysis 1. A balance sheet or statement of financial position , reports on a company's assets, liabilities, and owners equityat a given point in time. 2. An income statement or statement of comprehensive income , statement of revenue & expense , P&L or profit and loss report , reports on a company's income, expenses, and profits over a period of time. A profit and loss statement provides information on the operation of the enterprise. These include sales and the various expenses incurred during the stated p...
Financial statements (or financial report) is a formal
record of the financial activities and position of a business, person, or other
entity.
Relevant financial information is presented in a
structured manner and in a form easy to understand. They typically include
basic financial statements, accompanied by a management
discussion and analysis
1. A balance sheet or statement of
financial position, reports on a company's assets, liabilities,
and owners equityat
a given point in time.
2. An income statement or statement of
comprehensive income, statement of revenue & expense, P&L or profit
and loss report, reports on a company's income, expenses, and profits over
a period of time. A profit and loss statement provides information on the
operation of the enterprise. These include sales and the various expenses incurred
during the stated period.
3. A Statement of
changes in equity or equity statement or statement
of retained earnings, reports on the changes in equity of the company during the stated
period.
4. A cash flow statement reports
on a company's cash flow activities, particularly its operating, investing and financing activities.
For large corporations, these statements may be complex
and may include an extensive set of footnotes to the financial
statements and management discussion and analysis. The
notes typically describe each item on the balance sheet, income statement and
cash flow statement in further detail. Notes to financial statements are
considered an integral part of the financial statements.
Purpose for business entities
"The
objective of financial statements is to provide information about the financial
position, performance and changes in financial position of an enterprise that
is useful to a wide range of users in making economic decisions. Financial
statements should be understandable, relevant, reliable and comparable.
Reported assets, liabilities, equity, income and expenses are directly related
to an organization's financial position.
Financial
statements are intended to be understandable by readers who have "a
reasonable knowledge of business and economic activities and accounting and who
are willing to study the information diligently. Financial statements may
be used by users for different purposes:
· Owners and managers require financial statements to make
important business decisions that affect its continued operations. Financial analysis is
then performed on these statements to provide management with a more detailed
understanding of the figures. These statements are also used as part of
management's annual report to the stockholders.
· Employees also need these reports in making collective bargaining agreements
(CBA) with the management, in the case of labor unions or for individuals in
discussing their compensation, promotion and rankings.
· Prospective investors make use
of financial statements to assess the viability of investing in a business.
Financial analyses are often used by investors and are prepared by
professionals (financial analysts), thus providing them with the basis for
making investment decisions.
· Financial institutions (banks and other lending companies) use
them to decide whether to grant a company with fresh working capital or extend debt securities (such
as a long-term bank loan or debentures) to finance expansion and other
significant expenditures.
Consolidated
Consolidated financial
statements are defined as "Financial statements of
a group in which the assets, liabilities, equity, income, expenses and cash flows of the parent (company) and
its subsidiaries are
presented as those of a single economic entity", according to International
Accounting Standard 27 "Consolidated and separate financial statements", and International
Financial Reporting Standard 10 "Consolidated financial
statements".
Government
The rules for the recording,
measurement and presentation of government
financial statements may be different from those required for
business and even for non-profit organizations. They may use either of
two accounting methods:
accrual accounting, or cost
accounting, or a combination of the two (OCBOA).
A complete set of chart of accounts is
also used that is substantially different from the chart of a profit-oriented
business.
Personal
Personal
financial statements may be required from persons applying for a personal loan or financial aid. Typically, a personal financial
statement consists of a single form for reporting personally held assets and
liabilities (debts), or personal sources of income and expenses, or both. The
form to be filled out is determined by the organization supplying the loan or
aid.
Audit
and legal implications
Although
laws differ from country to country, an audit of
the financial statements of a public company is usually required for
investment, financing, and tax purposes. These are usually performed by
independent accountants or auditing firms. Results of the audit are summarized
in an audit report that
either provide an unqualified opinion on the financial statements or
qualifications as to its fairness and accuracy. The audit opinion on the
financial statements is usually included in the annual report.
There
has been much legal debate over who an auditor is liable to. Since audit
reports tend to be addressed to the current shareholders, it is commonly
thought that they owe a legal duty of care to them. But this may not be the
case as determined by common law precedent. In Canada, auditors are liable only
to investors using a prospectus to buy shares in the primary market. In
the United Kingdom,
they have been held liable to potential investors when the auditor was aware of
the potential investor and how they would use the information in the financial
statements. Nowadays auditors tend to include in their report liability
restricting language, discouraging anyone other than the addressees of their
report from relying on it. Liability is an important issue: in the UK, for
example, auditors have unlimited liability.
In
the United States,
especially in the post-Enron era there has
been substantial concern about the accuracy of financial statements. Corporate
officers - the chief executive
officer (CEO) and chief financial
officer (CFO) - are personally responsible for fair financial
reporting allowing those reading the report to have a good sense of the
organization.
Standards and regulations
Different
countries have developed their own accounting principles over time, making
international comparisons of companies difficult. To ensure uniformity and
comparability between financial statements prepared by different companies, a
set of guidelines and rules are used. Commonly referred to as Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), these set of guidelines
provide the basis in the preparation of financial statements, although many
companies voluntarily disclose
information beyond the scope of such requirements.
Recently
there has been a push towards standardizing accounting rules made by the International
Accounting Standards Board ("IASB"). IASB
develops International
Financial Reporting Standards that have been adopted by Australia, Canada and the European Union
Inclusion
in annual reports
To
entice new investors, public companies assemble their financial statements on
fine paper with pleasing graphics and photos in an annual report to shareholders, attempting to
capture the excitement and culture of the organization in a
"marketing brochure" of sorts.
Usually the company's chief executive will write a letter to shareholders,
describing management's performance and the company's financial highlights.
In
the United States, prior to the advent of the internet, the annual report was
considered the most effective way for corporations to communicate with
individual shareholders. Blue chip companies
went to great expense to produce and mail out attractive annual reports to
every shareholder. The annual report was often prepared in the style of a coffee table book.
Notes
Notes
to financial statements (notes) are additional information added to the end of
financial statements that help explain specific items in the statements as well
as provide a more comprehensive assessment of a company's financial condition.
Notes to financial statements can include information on debt, going concern criteria, accounts, contingent
liabilities or contextual information explaining the financial
numbers (e.g. to indicate a lawsuit).
The
notes clarify individual statement line-items. For example, if a company lists
a loss on a fixed asset impairment
line in their income statement, notes could state the reason for the impairment
by describing how the asset became impaired. Notes are also used to explain the
accounting methods used to prepare the statements and they support valuations
for how particular accounts have been computed.
In consolidated
financial statements, all subsidiaries are listed as well as the
amount of ownership (controlling interest)
that the parent company has
in the subsidiaries. Any items within the financial statements that are valuated
by estimation are part of the notes if a substantial difference exists between
the amount of the estimate previously reported and the actual result. Full
disclosure of the effects of the differences between the estimate and actual
results should be included.
Management
discussion and analysis
Management
discussion and analysis or MD & A is an integrated part of a company's
annual financial statements. The purpose of the MD & A is to provide a
narrative explanation, through the eyes of management, of how an entity has
performed in the past, its financial condition, and its future prospects. In so
doing, the MD&A attempt to provide investors with complete, fair, and
balanced information to help them decide whether to invest or continue to
invest in an entity.
The
section contains a description of the year gone by and some of the key factors
that influenced the business of the company in that year, as well as a fair and
unbiased overview of the company's past, present, and future.
MD
& A typically describes the corporation's liquidity position,
capital resources, results of its operations, underlying causes of
material changes in financial statement items (such as asset impairment and
restructuring charges), events of unusual or infrequent nature (such as mergers and
acquisitions or share buybacks), positive and negative trends,
effects of inflation, domestic and
international market risks, and significant uncertainties.
Move
to electronic statements
Financial
statements have been created on paper for hundreds of years. The growth of the
Web has seen more and more financial statements created in an electronic form
which is exchangeable over the Web. Common forms of electronic financial
statements are PDF and HTML. These types of electronic financial statements
have their drawbacks in that it still takes a human to read the information in
order to reuse the information contained in a financial statement.
More
recently a market driven global standard, XBRL (Extensible
Business Reporting Language), which can be used for creating financial
statements in a structured and computer readable format, has become more
popular as a format for creating financial statements. Many regulators around
the world such as the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission have mandated XBRL for the
submission of financial information.
The UN/CEFACT created, with respect to
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, (GAAP),
internal or external financial reporting XML messages
to be used between enterprises and their partners, such as private interested
parties (e.g. bank) and public collecting bodies (e.g. taxation authorities).
Many regulators use such messages to collect financial and economic
information.
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