Authors: Colin Barrow
Example
A company had sales of $/£/â¬5 million this year and $/£/â¬4 million last year and these figures appeared in the profit and loss accounts of those years. Debtors at the end of this year were $/£/â¬1 million and at the end of the previous year were $/£/â¬0.8 million. The cash inflow arising from sales this year is $/£/â¬4.8 million ($/£/â¬0.8 million + $/£/â¬5 million â $/£/â¬1 million) whereas the sales figure in the profit and loss account is $/£/â¬5 million.
For these reasons it is not possible to look at just this year's profit and loss account and balance sheet to find all the cash flows; you need the previous year's accounts too. The balance sheet will show the cash balance at the period end but will not easily disclose all the ways in which it was achieved. Compiling a cash-flow statement is quite a technical job and some training plus inside information is needed to complete the task. Nevertheless, the bulk of the items can be identified from an examination of the other two accounting statements for both the current and previous years.
From an MBA perspective it is understanding the requirement for a cash-flow statement as well as the other two accounts that is important, as well as being able to interpret the significance of the cash movements themselves.
XYZ plc
The un-audited condensed cash-flow statement for XYZ plc, established as a supplier of container solutions for source-separated waste, is shown in
Table 1.5
. Initially one man and a desk, the company grew to become a leading supplier of kerbside recycling boxes as well as a key supplier of other types of waste and recycling container solutions. Turnover by 2010 was running at over £30/$47/â¬34 million a year, with operating profit in excess of £1/$1.6/â¬1.13 million.
TABLE 1.5
 Â
Un-audited condensed cash-flow statement for XYZ plc (for the 6 months ended
30
June
2011
)
Half year to 30 June 2011 | Half year to 30 June 2010 | Year 31 Dec 2010 | |
$/£/â¬'000 | $/£/â¬'000 | $/£/â¬'000 | |
Net cash flows from operating activities | 2,242 | 3,879 | 1,171 |
Cash flows from investing activities | |||
Purchases of property, plant and equipment | (603) | (464) | (701) |
Proceeds from sale of property, plant and equip | 345 | â | â |
Purchase of intangible assets | (55) | (87) | (193) |
Purchase of investments | (35) | â | â |
Interest received | 28 | 58 | 107 |
Net cash used in investing activities | (320) | (493) | (787) |
Cash flows from financing activities | |||
Dividends paid | (310) | (283) | (422) |
Proceeds from issue of shares | 13 | â | 128 |
Net cash used in financing activities | (297) | (283) | (294) |
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents | 1,625 | 3,103 | 90 |
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period | 2,126 | 2,036 | 2,036 |
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of period | 3,751 | 5,139 | 2,126 |
The three columns represent the cash activities for two equivalent six-month periods and for the whole of the preceding year. The cash of £2,126 ($3,336/â¬2,395) thousand generated to 31 December 2010 (bottom of the right-hand column) is carried over to the start of the June 2011 six-month period (second figure from bottom of left-hand column). By adding the net increase (or decrease) in cash generated in this period we arrive at the closing cash position.
The cash-flow statement then gives us a complete picture of how cash movements came about: from normal sales activities; the purchase or disposal of assets; or from financing activities. This is an expansion of the sparse single figure in the company's closing balance sheet stating that cash in current assets is £3,751 ($5,886/â¬4,226) thousand.
The income statement/profit and loss account
If you look back to the financial situation in the High Note example you will see a good example of the difference between cash and profit. After all, the business has sold $/£/â¬60,000 worth of goods that it paid only $/£/â¬30,000 for, so it has a substantial profit margin to play with. While $/£/â¬39,108 has been paid to suppliers, only $/£/â¬30,000 of goods at cost have been sold,
meaning that $/£/â¬9,108 worth of instruments, sheet music and CDs are still in stock. A similar situation exists with sales. We have billed for $/£/â¬60,000 but been paid for only $/£/â¬48,000; the balance is owed by debtors. The bald figure at the end of the cash-flow projection showing High Note to be in the red to the tune of $/£/â¬4,908 seems to be missing some important facts.
The difference between profit and cash
Cash is immediate and takes account of nothing else. Profit, however, is a measurement of economic activity that considers other factors that can be assigned a value or cost. The accounting principle that governs profit is known as the âmatching principle', which means that income and expenditure are matched to the time period in which they occur. (Look back to earlier in the chapter where realization and accruals are explained.)
So for High Note the profit and loss account for the first six months would be as shown in
Table 1.6
.
TABLE 1.6
 Â
Income statemen
t
/profit and loss account for High Note for the six months AprâSept
$/£/⬠| $/£/⬠|
Sales | 60,000 |
Less cost of goods to be sold | 30,000 |
Gross profit | 30,000 |
Less expenses: | |
Heat, electric, telephone, internet etc | 6,000 |
Wages | 6,000 |
Advertising | 9,300 |
Total expenses | 21,300 |
Profit before tax, interest and depreciation charges | 8,700 |
The structure of the income statemen
t
/profit and loss statement
This account is set out in more detail for a business in order to make it more useful when it comes to understanding how a business is performing. For example, although the profit shown in our worked example is $/£/â¬8,700, in fact it would be rather lower. As money has been borrowed to finance cash flow there would be interest due, as there would be on the longer-term loan of $/£/â¬10,000.
In practice we have four levels of profit:
For High Note this could look much as set out in
Table 1.7
.
TABLE 1.7
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High Note extended profit and loss account
$/£/⬠| |
Sales | 60,000 |
Less the cost of goods to be sold | 30,000 |
Gross profit | 30,000 |
Less operating expenses | 21,300 |
Operating profit | 8,700 |
Less interest on bank loan and overdraft | 600 |
Profit before tax | 8,100 |
Less tax | 1,827 |
Profit after tax | 6,723 |
A more substantial business than High Note will have taken on a wide range of commitments. For example, as well as the owner's money, there may be a long-term loan to be serviced (interest and capital repayments); parts of the workshop or offices may be sublet, generating ânon-operating income'; and there will certainly be some depreciation expense to deduct. Like any accounting report, it should be prepared in the best form for the user, bearing in mind the requirements of the regulatory authorities. The elements to be included are:
Income statement/profit and loss spreadsheet
There is an online spreadsheet at SCORE's website (
www.score.org/resources/1-year-profit-loss-projection.xls
). Download in Excel format and you have a profit and loss account with 30 lines of expenses, the headings of which you can change or delete to meet your particular needs.
A balance sheet is a snapshot picture at a moment in time. On the one hand it shows the value of assets (possessions) owned by the business and, on the other, it shows who provided the funds with which to finance those assets and to whom the business is ultimately liable.
Assets are of two main types and are classified under the headings of either fixed assets or current assets. Fixed assets come in three forms. First, there are the hardware or physical things used by the business itself and which are not for sale to customers. Examples of fixed assets include buildings, plant, machinery, vehicles, furniture and fittings. Next come intangible fixed assets, such as goodwill, intellectual property etc, and these are also shown under the general heading âfixed assets'. Finally there are investments in other businesses. Other assets in the process of eventually being turned into cash from customers are called current assets, and include stocks, work in progress, money owed by customers and cash itself.
Total assets = Fixed assets + Current assets
Assets can only be bought with funds provided by the owners or borrowed from someone else, for example bankers or creditors. Owners provide funds by directly investing in the business (say, when they buy shares issued by the company) or indirectly by allowing the company to retain some of the profits in reserves. These sources of money are known collectively as liabilities.
Total liabilities = Share capital and reserves + Borrowings and other creditors
Borrowed capital can take the form of a long-term loan at a fixed rate of interest or a short-term loan, such as a bank overdraft, usually at a variable rate of interest. All short-term liabilities owed by a business and due for
payment within 12 months are referred to as creditors falling due within one year, and long-term indebtedness is called creditors falling due after one year.
So far in our High Note example, the money spent on âcapital' items such as the $/£/â¬12,500 spent on a computer and fixtures and fittings have been ignored, as has the $/£/â¬9,108 worth of sheet music etc remaining in stock waiting to be sold and the $/£/â¬12,000 of money owed by customers who have yet to pay up. An assumption has to be made about where the cash deficit will be made up, and the most logical short-term source is a bank overdraft.
For High Note at the end of September the balance sheet is set out in
Table 1.8
.
TABLE 1.8
 Â
High Note balance sheet at
30
September
$/£/⬠| $/£/⬠|
Assets | |
Fixed assets | |
Fixtures, fitting, equipment | 11,500 |
Computer | 1,000 |
Total fixed assets | 12,500 |
Working capital | |
Current assets | |
Stock | 9,108 |
Debtors | 12,000 |
Cash | 0 |
21,108 | |
Less current liabilities (creditors falling due within one year) | |
Overdraft | 4,908 |
Creditors | 0 |
4,908 | |
Net current assets | |
[Working capital (CA-CL)] | 16,200 |
Total assets less current liabilities | 28,700 |
Less creditors falling due after one year | |
Long-term bank loan | 10,000 |
Net total assets | 18,700 |
Capital and reserves | |
Owner's capital introduced | 10,000 |
Profit retained (from P&L account) | 8,700 |
Total capital and reserves | 18,700 |