Accounting Chapter 12: Financial Statement Analysis
Debt to equity ratio
Total liabilities divided by stockholders' equity; measures a company's solvency risk.
Average collection period
Approximate number of days the average accounts receivable balance is outstanding. It equals 365 divided by the receivables turnover ratio.
Average days in inventory
Approximate number of days the average inventory is held. It equals 365 days divided by the inventory turnover ratio.
Profitability ratios
Measure the earnings or operating effectiveness of a company.
Receivables turnover ratio
Net credit sales divided by average accounts receivable; the number of times during a year that the average accounts receivable balance is collected ("turns over").
Return on equity
Net income divided by average stockholders' equity; measures the income generated per dollar of equity.
Return on assets
Net income divided by average total assets; measures the amount of net income generated for each dollar invested in assets.
Profit margin
Net income divided by net sales; indicates the earnings per dollar of sales.
Asset turnover
Net sales divided by average total assets, which measures the sales per dollar of assets invested.
Aggressive accounting practices
Practices that result in reporting higher income, higher assets, and lower liabilities.
Conservative accounting practices
Practices that result in reporting lower income, lower assets, and higher liabilities.
Times interest earned ratio
Ratio that compares interest expense with income available to pay those charges.
Liquidity
Refers to a company's ability to pay its current liabilities.
Solvency
Refers to a company's ability to pay its long-term liabilities.
Quality of earnings
Refers to the ability of reported earnings to reflect the company's true earnings, as well as the usefulness of reported earnings to predict future earnings.
Growth stocks
Stocks that have high expectations of future earnings growth and therefore usually trade at higher PE ratios.
Value stocks
Stocks that have lower share prices in relationship to their fundamental ratios and therefore trade at lower (bargain) PE ratios.
Extraordinary item
An event that is (1) unusual in nature and (2) infrequent in occurrence.
Horizontal analysis
Analyzes trends in financial statement data for a single company over time.
Acid-test ratio
Cash, current investments, and accounts receivable divided by current liabilities; measures the availability of liquid current assets to pay current liabilities.
Price-earnings (PE) ratio
Compares a company's share price with its earnings per share.
Inventory turnover ratio
Cost of goods sold divided by average inventory; the number of times the firm sells its average inventory balance during a reporting period.
Current ratio
Current assets divided by current liabilities; measures the availability of current assets to pay current liabilities.
Vertical analysis
Expresses each item in a financial statement as a percentage of the same base amount.
Gross profit ratio
Gross profit divided by net sales; measures the amount by which the sale price of inventory exceeds its cost per dollar of sales.
Discontinued operation
The sale or disposal of a significant component of a company's operations.