Financial Statement Analysis
Financial statement analysis is the process of examining a company’s financial reports to assess its performance, financial health, and future prospects. It helps internal managers make operational decisions and external stakeholders—investors, creditors, analysts—evaluate value, risk, and profitability.
Key takeaways
- Analysis draws on three core statements: balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement. Each provides a different view of the business.
- Common techniques are horizontal analysis (trend), vertical analysis (structure), and ratio analysis (relationships).
- Typical metrics include liquidity, efficiency, profitability, leverage, and cash-flow measures, which together support valuation and decision-making.
The three core financial statements
Balance sheet — assets, liabilities, equity
The balance sheet is a snapshot of a company’s financial position at a point in time. It shows:
* Assets (current and noncurrent) — resources controlled by the company (cash, receivables, inventory, property).
* Liabilities — obligations due to creditors (payables, debt).
* Shareholders’ equity — residual interest (paid-in capital, retained earnings).
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The balance sheet must balance: Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Key uses include assessing liquidity, solvency, and the book value of the business.
Income statement — revenue to net income
The income statement reports performance over a period:
* Revenue (sales) less cost of goods sold = Gross profit.
* Subtract operating expenses (SG&A, depreciation) = Operating profit (EBIT).
* After interest and taxes = Net income.
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Profit margins (gross, operating, net) show how efficiently a company converts revenue into profit and where costs concentrate.
Cash flow statement — operations, investing, financing
The cash flow statement reconciles net income to actual cash movement across:
* Operating activities — cash generated from core business.
* Investing activities — purchases and sales of long-term assets.
* Financing activities — debt and equity financing, dividends.
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It reveals cash generation, capital spending needs, and financing sources that are not evident from accrual-based income.
Common analysis techniques
Horizontal analysis (trend)
Compare line items across multiple periods to identify growth rates, trends, and anomalies. Example: revenue growth or rising operating expenses over several years.
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Vertical analysis (common-size)
Express each line item as a percentage of a base (e.g., sales for the income statement, total assets for the balance sheet) to analyze structural relationships and cost proportions.
Ratio analysis
Calculate ratios to quantify liquidity, efficiency, profitability, and leverage. Ratios allow comparisons across time and between peers.
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Common ratios by category:
* Liquidity (balance sheet): current ratio, quick ratio.
* Efficiency (balance sheet/income): asset turnover, inventory turnover, receivables turnover (days sales outstanding).
* Profitability (income): gross margin, operating margin, net margin, return on assets (ROA), return on equity (ROE).
* Leverage (balance sheet): debt-to-assets, debt-to-equity, interest coverage.
* Cash flow: operating cash flow, free cash flow, EBITDA (as a proxy for cash operating performance).
Comprehensive measures:
* DuPont analysis — decomposes ROE into profitability, efficiency, and leverage components.
* Free cash flow and discounted cash flow (DCF) — used for valuation by projecting and discounting future cash flows.
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How to evaluate performance — practical approach
- Gather at least three to five years of financial statements for trend analysis.
- Perform horizontal analysis to identify growth patterns and volatility.
- Run vertical (common-size) analysis to spot structural strengths or cost pressures.
- Compute key ratios and benchmark them against peers, industry averages, and historical levels.
- Reconcile income and cash flows to understand quality of earnings (e.g., rising net income with weak operating cash flow may indicate accruals or one-time items).
- Investigate significant changes or discrepancies in notes and disclosures (e.g., accounting policy changes, contingent liabilities).
Example insight
If gross margin is higher than peers and has steadily increased (horizontal analysis), the company likely has cost advantages or pricing power. If operating cash flow lags net income, earnings quality may be weaker despite favorable margins.
Advantages of financial statement analysis
- Transforms raw financial data into actionable insights about performance, liquidity, solvency, and growth potential.
- Supports investment decisions, credit assessments, management planning, and valuation.
- Enables benchmarking across time and against competitors.
Practical tips
- Use multiple techniques—no single ratio tells the whole story.
- Adjust for one-time items and accounting changes to improve comparability.
- Combine quantitative analysis with qualitative factors (industry trends, management quality, competitive position).
- Regularly update analyses as new financial information becomes available.
Financial statement analysis is both a diagnostic and predictive tool: when applied systematically, it clarifies strengths, weaknesses, and value drivers that guide better financial decisions.