Management Information

Five Tips for Analyzing an Income Statement


In today's article, we'll be looking at the income statement, which is the most deceptively simple of the major financial statements. I say simple because it's just a list of all the revenue, minus all the expenses, to calculate what's left over in profit. It's no more difficult than putting your family budget together, right?

That's where the deceptive part of the description comes in. The items on the income statement are easily manipulated by, say, less-than-honest management, and don't necessarily represent the true situation at a company. Even totally honest companies can have income statements that don't represent economic reality. Cash flows define economic reality, revenue and expenses define accounting reality.

You see, the difference between your household budget and a company's income statement is their relationships to actual cash flows. Your household budget will generally match your cash inflows and outflows. Not so with an income statement. Income statements can vary significantly from the company's cash flow, meaning that a company in economic trouble can show a very "good" income statement up until the day it goes bankrupt.

Generally speaking, though, the income statement is a good place to start when evaluating a company. In my forthcoming e-book, Fundamentals of Financial Statement Analysis, I lay out the process for evaluating the health of a company through the financial statements. I'm shooting for publication in the beginning of 2004, but in the meantime, here are some tips and strategies for evaluating an income statement.

1. Create a Common Size Statement

What's a common size statement, you ask? It's the income statement, only with each line item represented as a percentage of sales. This is easy to do with a spreadsheet on your computer, but you can do it on paper just as well. Net Sales is always 100% at the top, and each of the expenses is divided by total sales to arrive at a percentage. For example, if a company has $100 in sales and $50 in cost of goods sold, the common size statement will look like this:

Sales 100%

Cost of Goods Sold 50%

Gross Profit 50%

The importance of the common size statement can't be overstated. It gives you the calculation of all your profit margins, from gross to net, and shows how much each cost item takes away from your profits.

2. Create a Year-to-Year Comparison Statement

The next step is to make a year-to-year comparison statement. You can't evaluate financial statements for just a single year; they have to be compared to previous years. The only formula you need to know for these calculations is:

(current year / previous year) - 1 = % change

Again, a spreadsheet makes this process so much easier, but it can be done by hand. I like to have five years of data, which yields four years of comparison data. This way you aren't just looking at an exceptionally good or bad year for the analysis. Plus, you can get a reasonable estimate of future growth when you do your discounted cash flow analysis. (I'll have more on the Discounted Cash Flow in the future.)

3. Read the Management Discussion and Analysis

If you take the time to read the MD&A, you'll have an advantage on most investors. A majority of individual investors simply skip this part, and go right to calculating ratios or looking at the EPS. Seasoned investors know that the MD&A provides the backup data for the income statement line items, and they will take time to read it.

A good Management Discussion and Analysis will give you the details you need to understand the items on the income statement. You should get segmented sales data, cost drivers, etc. in this section. If you can't make sense of the MD&A, that should set off alarm bells in your head. If you don't find the information you need in the MD&A, you should?

4. Look at the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (Footnotes)

The footnotes tend to be more difficult to understand than the MD&A, but you get really detailed information here. The footnotes are where management hides the dirty laundry. And when you've got guys making today's corporate salaries that laundry pile can get pretty big. Here's where you'll likely find what you couldn't in the MD&A, it's just that in the notes you may have to do some putting of two and two together.

Take your time sifting through this section, and try to identify the income statement items that relate to the footnotes you're reading. You can do it the other way around, as well, and look for the footnotes that relate to the income statement item.

If you still can't figure out what the company is doing, after going through the MD&A and the footnotes, you may want to consider looking at another company. This one may be too complicated (or too devious) for your abilities. Don't feel bad about not understanding the business, either. Even the great Warren Buffett admits that he doesn't understand some businesses, and he never lets his ego run away from him. If he can't understand it, he won't invest in it. I recommend you do the same thing.

5. Look at segmented data

I always like to look at segmented sales and profit figures to determine which product lines, or operating businesses, are growing sales faster than the others. This information is usually in the MD&A. If you can, try to find the operating profit for each business segment as well. Then look at the profit margins for each segment of the business.

You may be surprised at the different profitability levels of each business segment. Compare the segment with the fastest growing sales versus the segment with the highest operating profit. If these are the same segment, that's good news. If they aren't, that's okay too.

You do want to watch out for companies that have the lowest operating profit in their fastest growing segment. This could cause a decline in the company's overall profitability as sales grow faster than profits. For example, a segment that's growing 5% a year, but has a 10% margin, will contribute more to total operating profit growth than a segment growing at 20% a year with a 1% margin.

I hope you find these tips helpful. Of course, there are plenty of other analysis tools that you can use to evaluate financial statements. It's important that you keep looking for more and better ways to analyze company data, because constant learning will make you a consistently better investor.

About The Author

Chris Mallon is the editor and publisher of the Undervalued Weekly, a free personal finance and investment newsletter dedicated to creating smarter investors.

To sign up for the Undervalued Weekly, send e-mail to underval@hot-response.com, or sign-up through the website at www.dynamicinvestors.net/index7.html; chrismallon@dynamicinvestors.net


MORE RESOURCES:

RTT News

Oracle Claims Taleo's Cloud-based Talent Management Jackpot
ReadWriteWeb
Corporations recruit these people, and then undertake what's called compensation management in an effort to retain them as long as possible, and to let go of talent that doesn't perform up to scale. The value of a single, global database for evaluating ...
Oracle buys talent management firm Taleo for US$1.9BITWorld Canada
Oracle Buys TaleoMarketWatch (press release)
Oracle 'Hires' HR Software Maker Taleo in $1.9B BuyoutFox Business
PC Magazine -PCWorld (blog)
all 265 news articles »


NFL time-management debates go into overtime
San Francisco Chronicle (blog)
The strategy itself has become a fashionable, one-size-fits-all piece of time management. But it didn't match the Giants' needs and won't cover anyone's posterior when it backfires. A team takes a huge risk by ordering the offense to play defensive ...

and more »


Unity Management Group Subsidiary Receives Order and Completes Contract
MarketWatch (press release)
9, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Unity Management Group, Inc. /quotes/zigman/582474 UYMG +50.94% (or "the Company") announced today its wholly owned subsidiary Metropolitan Computing Corporation (or MCC) has completed a maintenance contract on a ...

and more »


Tuition Management Systems Enters Into Marketing Agreement With School and ...
MarketWatch (press release)
BOSTON, MA, Feb 09, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- The First Marblehead Corporation /quotes/zigman/331260/quotes/nls/fmd FMD -0.80% today announced that its subsidiary Tuition Management Systems LLC (TMS) has entered into a marketing agreement with ...

and more »


Tiedemann Wealth Management Wins PAM Award
MarketWatch (press release)
NEW YORK, NY, Feb 09, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Tiedemann Wealth Management, LLC has been recognized by Private Asset Management (PAM) as Best Private Wealth Manager in the category of firms with over $5 billion in assets under management.

and more »


Ariz. tribe votes to take over Skywalk management
CBS News
A northwestern Arizona tribe has voted to take over management of the Grand Canyon Skywalk from the Las Vegas developer who built it. David Jin partnered with the Hualapai Tribe to build the horseshoe-shaped glass bridge that juts out from the Grand ...

and more »


MOBI Wireless Management Partners with Notify Technology to Offer Integrated ...
MarketWatch (press release)
INDIANAPOLIS, Feb 09, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- MOBI Wireless Management, a provider of strategic management solutions for corporate mobility programs, today announces a technology partnership with Notify Technology Corporation's NotifyMDM.

and more »


Aberdeen Publishes BI, Financial Management, Retail and Banking, IT Security ...
MarketWatch (press release)
BOSTON, MA, Feb 09, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Aberdeen Group, a Harte-Hanks Company /quotes/zigman/133185/quotes/nls/hhs HHS -1.02% , today announced the publication of new research reports from its Business Intelligence, Financial Management ...

and more »


Asset management: The foxy normal
News24
It is apparent that many of the rules of the game have changed for managing a portfolio of investments, whether it is your own money or it belongs to a pension fund or a company. Everyone from laymen to market experts alike is agreed that it is now ...

and more »


Integrated Asset Management Corp. Announces Results for the First Quarter of ...
MarketWatch (press release)
TORONTO, ONTARIO, Feb 09, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Integrated Asset Management Corp. ("IAM") /quotes/zigman/18979 CA:IAM -7.14% today announced unaudited financial results for the quarter ended December 31, 2011. Review of the 3-Month Period ...

and more »

Google News

home | site map
© 2006