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Interim Statement

Posted on October 17, 2025October 22, 2025 by user

Interim Statement

An interim statement (or interim report) is a financial report issued by a company between its full-year (annual) financial statements. Interim statements provide timely information about a company’s financial position, performance, cash flows, and changes in equity for a portion of the fiscal year (typically a quarter), and are generally unaudited.

Purpose and benefits

  • Keeps shareholders, analysts, and the market informed between annual reports.
  • Alerts the public to material changes or events that could affect valuation or operations.
  • Helps investors allocate capital and supports market liquidity by reducing information gaps.
  • Enables management to communicate progress against targets and respond to market developments.

Preparation and standards

  • The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) recommends presenting condensed versions of financial statements covering:
  • Financial position (balance sheet)
  • Income statement
  • Cash flows
  • Changes in equity
  • Explanatory notes
  • Companies should apply the same accounting policies in interim statements as in their audited annual reports, to ensure consistency and comparability.
  • Interim statements are typically less detailed than annual reports and are not usually audited.

Common example: Quarterly reports

  • Quarterly reports are the most common interim statements and summarize unaudited financial statements for a three-month period. They may include:
  • Quarter-to-quarter results
  • Year-to-date figures
  • Comparative information (e.g., this quarter vs. same quarter last year)
  • In the U.S., publicly traded companies file quarterly reports on Form 10-Q with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The annual audited report is filed on Form 10-K and contains more comprehensive disclosures.
  • Typical fiscal quarters (for calendar-year companies) end on March 31, June 30, September 30, and December 31. Quarterly reports are usually filed within a few weeks after quarter-end.

Other interim disclosures

  • Form 8-K: Used to report unscheduled material events or corporate changes (e.g., acquisitions, bankruptcies, director resignations, fiscal year changes). It gives timely notice of significant events that may affect shareholders.
  • Form 13F: Investment managers overseeing more than $100 million in certain assets must file quarterly holdings reports (Form 13F) with the SEC.

Limitations

  • Interim statements are generally unaudited and may be less detailed than annual reports.
  • Short-term fluctuations in results can be misleading if viewed without context or year-to-date comparisons.

Key takeaways

  • Interim statements provide timely, periodic financial information between annual reports.
  • They promote transparency and help investors and markets react more quickly to material developments.
  • Quarterly reports (10-Q) are the most common form of interim reporting; other disclosures (8-K, 13F) cover specific events or holdings.
  • Consistent accounting policies and clear explanatory notes improve the usefulness of interim statements.

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