Which Financial Statement is the Most Important? |
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University | Amity blog |
Service Type | Assignment |
Course | |
Semester | |
Short Name or Subject Code | Financial statement analysis |
Product | of Assignment (Amity blog) |
Pattern | Section A,B,C Wise |
Price | Click to view price |
Financial statement analysis
1. Which financial statement is the most important?
2. Discuss the meaning of financial statements.
3. Discuss the limitations of financial statements
4. Define the term inter firm comparison.
5. Discuss the Various tools of Financial Analysis.
6 .What are the Profitability Ratios?
7. Discuss the Ratio analysis concept.
8. Elaborate the concept of Analysis of segmental information.
Case Study
When a loss-making company creates a deferred tax asset, it is a signal that the company’s management is optimistic of an early turnaround. This is because conservative accounting requires that a company recognise the tax savings from carry-forward losses only if there is reasonable certainty that the company will actually have book profits in the near future. However, investors should make an independent assessment of the company’s financials to see if the losses are from one-time factors, which may be rectified in the future. A good approach to reporting deferred tax liabilities and assets is the one adopted by some Indian companies in their balance sheet. It provides detailed disclosures on the opening balance of each component of deferred tax liability or asset, takes the reader through the additions and deductions during the year, and arrives at the closing balance as reported in the financial statements. In addition, companies may be asked to provide a statement that explains why the taxation provision reported to shareholders differs from the standard tax rate applicable to them. This may leave investors much wiser about the sources of a company’s tax savings than is the case with deferred tax accounting, with all its complexities For instance, Nagarjuna Fertilisers made a loss of Rs. 191 crore before taxes in the March 2015 quarter. But it created a deferred tax asset of Rs. 4.75 crore for the quarter. The company’s profits for the quarter took a knock from large-scale provisioning to meet the liability arising from a revision in subsidy realised from the government in the earlier years. The deferred tax asset suggests that the company believes that the losses are of a one-time nature, resulting from the provisioning.
1. Analyse this information and write down the case facts.
2. How should the investors make an independent assessment of the company’s financials to interpret the losses?
3. Should the companies be required to explain the source of deferred tax provisions or credits in their interim financial statements just as they do in their balance sheets?
Assignment C
1. A …………. also referred to as a statement of financial position, reports on a company assets, liabilities, and owner’s equity at a given point in time.
Options
balance sheet
cash flow statement
income statement
Profit and loss statement
Question No. 2 Marks
2. A ………….. reports on a company cash flow activities, particularly its operating, investing and financing activities.
Options
Income statement
cash flow statement
Balance Sheet
Profit and loss statement
3. A………….. , also known as equity statement or statement of retained earnings, reports on the changes in equity of the company during the stated period.
Options
Balance Sheet
cash flow statement
Statement of changes in equity
Profit and loss statement
4. ………… plays an integral role in the capital markets and economic stability and growth, and efforts to enhance its quality are vital.
Options
Profit and loss statement
Balance Sheet
cash flow statement
Financial reporting
5. ……………. are those which provide either goods or services with the basic objective of profit earning.
Options
Business organizations
Government Organisation
Private Organisation
None of these
6. A ……………. provides information on the operation of the enterprise. These include sales and the various expenses incurred during the stated period.
Options
Income statement
Profit and loss statement
Balance Sheet
Financial reporting
7. An……………, also known as a statement of comprehensive income, statement of revenue & expense, P&L or profit and loss report, reports on a company's income, expenses, and profits over a period of time.
Options
Financial reporting
Profit and loss statement
Income statement
Balance Sheet
8. The ……………. represents a record of a company assets, liabilities and equity at a particular point in time.
Options
Income statement
Profit and loss statement
Financial reporting
Balance sheet
9. ……….. represent the resources that the business owns or controls at a given point in time.
Options
Assets
Liability
Non Liability
None of these
10. A …………..is an obligation that a business owes to someone and its settlement involves the transfer of cash or other resources.
Options
Assets
Liability
Non Liability
None of these
11. A common problem with …………… is that the aggregation of information in the financial statements may have changed over time, due to ongoing changes in the chart of accounts, so that revenues, expenses, assets, or liabilities may shift between different accounts and therefore appear to cause variances when comparing account balances from one period to the next.
Options
Horizontal analysis
Proportion analysis
Vertical analysis
Financial statement analysis
12. The most common use of …………. in an income statement is to show the various expense line items as a percentage of sales, though it can also be used to show the percentage of different revenue line items that make up total sales.
Options
Financial statement analysis
Vertical analysis
Proportion analysis
Horizontal analysis
13. …………..is the process of reviewing and analyzing a company financial statements to make better economic decisions
Options
Horizontal analysis
Vertical analysis
Financial statement analysis
Proportion analysis
14. ………… is the proportional analysis of a financial statement, where each line item on a financial statement is listed as a percentage of another item.
Options
Horizontal analysis
Financial statement analysis
Proportion analysis
Vertical analysis
15. ……………. is the comparison of historical financial information over a series of reporting periods, or of the ratios derived from this financial information.
Options
Horizontal analysis
Vertical analysis
Proportion analysis
Financial statement analysis
16. In this ……………., an array of ratios is available for discerning the relationship between the size of various accounts in the financial statements.
Options
Vertical analysis
Proportion analysis
Financial statement analysis
Horizontal analysis
17. ………….. create trend lines for key items in the financial statements over multiple time periods, to see how the company is performing.
Options
Horizontal;
Vertical
Trends
None of these
18. A financial statement, which expresses the different values in form of percentage, is called a…………….. .
Options
Proportion analysis
Horizontal analysis
Vertical analysis
Common size financial statement
19. The main purpose of …………..is improvement of efficiency by showing the management of participating firm its present achievements and possible weaknesses
Options
IFC
Intra firm comparison
Costing system
None of these
20. Inter-firm comparison is a natural outcome of uniform…………....
Options
Budget system
Costing system
Budget Control System
None of these
21. The …………. of a company determines its ability to utilise the Assets employed in the company efficiently and effectively to earn a good return.
Options
Return on Assets
Analysis Ratio analysis
Dividend Coverage Ratio
Analysis Ratio analysis
22. ………….states the number of times an organization is capable of paying dividends to shareholders from the profits earned during an accounting period.
Options
Working capital turnover ratio
Dividend Coverage Ratio
Analysis Ratio analysis
Profitability Ratios
23. The ……………… measures how well a company is utilizing its working capital to support a given level of sales. Working capital is current assets minus current liabilities.
Options
Analysis Ratio analysis
Price earnings ratio
Working capital turnover ratio
Profitability Ratios
24. The ……………. of a company determines its ability to withstand competition and adverse conditions like rising costs, falling prices or declining sales in the future.
Options
Return on Assets
Ratio calculation
Ratios
Profit Margin
25. ………… are the means of presenting information, in the form of a ratio or percentage, which enables a comparison to be made between one significant figure and another.
Options
Profit Margin
Return on Assets
Ratio calculation
None of these
26. The purpose of ………….. is to evaluate the various aspects of a company’s operations. It can be calculated from any couple of numbers.
Options
Return on Assets
Ratio calculation
Profit Margin
None of these
27. …………… is indispensable part of interpretation of results revealed by the financial statements. It provides users with crucial financial information and points out the areas which require investigation.
Options
Price earnings ratio
Working capital turnover ratio
Analysis Ratio analysis
Profitability Ratios
28. …………….. refers to activity of assessing financial statements to judge the performance of company.
Options
Analysis Ratio analysis
Working capital turnover ratio
Price earnings ratio
Financial analysis
29. …………….. show how successful a company is in terms of generating returns or profits on the Investment that it has made in the business.
Options
Profitability Ratios
Price earnings ratio
Analysis Ratio analysis
Working capital turnover ratio
30. The…………….. , often called the P/E ratio or price to earnings ratio, is a market prospect ratio that calculates the market value of a stock relative to its earnings by comparing the market price per share by the earnings per share.
Options
Profitability Ratios
Price earnings ratio
Analysis Ratio analysis
Working capital turnover ratio
31. A ……………..is a business segment or a geographical segment identified on the basis of foregoing definitions for which segment information is required to be disclosed by this Standard.
Options
reportable segment
business segment
Segment assets
geographical segment
32. ………… are those operating liabilities that result from the operating activities of a segment and that either are directly attributable to the segment or can be allocated to the segment on a reasonable basis.
Options
Reportable segment
Segment liabilities
Business segment
Segment assets
33. …………are those operating assets that are employed by a segment in its operating activities and that either are directly attributable to the segment or can be allocated to the segment on a reasonable basis
Options
Business segment
Geographical segment
Segment assets
Reportable segment
34. ………….. is revenue from sales to external customers as reported in the statement of profit and loss.
Options
Business segment
Geographical segment
Segment assets
Enterprise revenue
35. …………… is the aggregate of the portion of enterprise revenue that is directly attributable to a segment,
Options
Segment revenue
Segment assets
Geographical segment
Business segment
36. A …………… is a distinguishable component of an enterprise that is engaged in providing products or services within a particular economic environment and that is subject to risks and returns that are different from those of components operating in other economic environments..
Options
Business segment
Geographical segment
Segment revenue
Segment assets
37. A …………..is a distinguishable component of an enterprise that is engaged in providing an individual product or service or a group of related products or services and that is subject to risks and returns that are different from those of other business segments
Options
Segment revenue
Geographical segment
Business segment
Segment assets
38. ………………established a relationship between total assets and long debts. Debt- Equity Ratio
Options
Solvency Ratio
Debt Equity Ratio
Quick ratio
Total Assets to Debt Ratio
39. …………. establishes the relationship between quick/ liquid assets and current liabilities.
Options
Quick ratio
Total Assets to Debt Ratio
Debt Equity Ratio
Solvency Ratio
40. ………….. measures the relationship between long-term debt and shareholders’ funds. Quick Ratio / Acid test ratio/Liquid ratio
Options
Total Assets to Debt Ratio
Debt Equity Ratio
Quick ratio
Solvency Ratio