A%20Guide%20to%20Earnings%20and%20Financial%20Reporting%20Quality - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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A%20Guide%20to%20Earnings%20and%20Financial%20Reporting%20Quality

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Title: A%20Guide%20to%20Earnings%20and%20Financial%20Reporting%20Quality


1
A Guide to Earnings and Financial Reporting
Quality
This chapter considers the quality of reported
financial information, which is a critical
element in evaluating financial statement data
2
Why Earnings Quality
  • analyst should develop
  • AN EARNINGS FIGURE
  • that reflects the
  • FUTURE ONGOING POTENTIAL
  • of the firm

OUR OBJECTIVE IS NOT FRAUD DETECTION
3
A Guide to Earnings and Financial Reporting
Quality (cont.)
The earnings statement provides management with
opportunities for influencing the outcome of
reported earnings in ways that may not
best represent economic reality or the future
operating potential of a firm

4
A Guide to Earnings and Financial Reporting
Quality (cont.)
  • The primary focus of this chapter
  • To provide a step-by-step guide
  • To provide an approach to use in analyzing and
    interpreting the qualitative factors


5
A Checklist for Earnings Quality
Major areas on the checklist include
  • Sales
  • Cost of Goods Sold
  • Operating Expenses
  • Nonoperating Revenue and Expense
  • Other Issues


6
Sales
Potential areas include
  • 1. Premature revenue recognition
  • Gross vs. net basis
  • Vendor financing
  • Allowance for doubtful accounts
  • Price vs. volume changes
  • Real vs. nominal growth


7
Sales (cont.)
1. Premature revenue recognition
According to GAAP, revenue should not be
recognized until there is evidence that a true
sale has taken place Many firms have violated
this accounting principle by recording revenue
before the conditions for a true sale have been
met

8
Sales (cont.)
2. Gross vs. net basis
Another tactic to boost revenues is to record
sales at the gross rather than the net price

9
Sales (cont.)
3. Vendor financing
Some companies use vendor financing to increase
revenues by lending their customers (other
companies) money to purchase their products

10
Sales (cont.)
4. Allowance for doubtful accounts
This is a type of reserve account that can be
manipulated by under- or overestimating bad debt
expenses

11
Sales (cont.)
5. Price vs. volume changes
In general, higher quality earnings would be the
product of both volume and price increases
(during inflation)
6. Real vs. nominal growth
Important to determine if sales are growing in
real (inflation-adjusted) as well as nominal
(as reported) terms

12
Cost of Goods Sold
Potential areas include
  • Cost-flow assumption for inventory
  • Base LIFO layer liquidations
  • Fulfillment costs
  • Loss recognitions on write-downs of inventories


13
Cost of Goods Sold
7. Cost-flow assumption for inventory
LIFO results in the matching of current costs
with current revenues and produces higher quality
earnings than either FIFO or average cost

14
Cost of Goods Sold (cont.)
9. Fulfillment costs
An expense account that some companies add to
operating expenses to record costs that are
typically classified as cost of goods sold,
impacting their gross profit margin and lowering
their quality of earnings

15
Cost of Goods Sold (cont.)
10. Loss recognitions on write-downs of
inventories

If the value of inventory falls below its
original cost, the inventory is written down to
market value. When the write-down is included in
cost of goods sold, the gross profit margin is
impacted

16
Operating Expenses
Potential areas include
  • Discretionary expenses
  • Depreciation
  • Asset impairment
  • Big bath or restructuring charges
  • Reserves
  • In-process research and development
  • Pension accounting-interest rate assumptions


17
Operating Expenses (cont.)
11. Discretionary expenses
If variable operating expenses such as repair and
maintenance, research and development, and
advertising and marketing are reduced primarily
to benefit the current years reported earnings,
the long-run impact on operating profit may be
detrimental and lower the quality of those
earnings

18
Operating Expenses (cont.)
12. Depreciation
  • misclassification of operating expenses as
    capital expenditures creates poor quality of
    financial reporting on all financial statements
  • comparing companies is difficult when they use
    different depreciation methods and different
    estimates for the lives of their long-lived assets


19
Operating Expenses (cont.)
13. Asset impairment
The write-down of asset values, following the
principle of carrying assets at the lower of cost
or market value, affects the comparability and
thus the quality of financial data

20
Operating Expenses (cont.)
14. Big bath or restructuring charges
Large charges classified as restructuring charges
are sometimes used by companies to clean up their
balance sheet Ongoing restructuring of a company
can be a signal of underlying problems

21
Operating Expenses (cont.)
15. Reserves
Often created to set aside funds today to cover
some known future cost Abuse occurs when funds
are set aside in good years (i.e., reducing net
income) and then shifting the reserve amount to
the income statement in poor years

22
Operating Expenses (cont.)
16. In-process research and development
One-time charges taken at the time of an
acquisition Can be problematic if companies
write-off significant amounts of research and
development in the year of acquisition in order
to boost earnings in later years

23
Operating Expenses (cont.)
17. Pension accounting-interest rate
assumptions
  • A change in the pension interest rate assumption
    can impact earnings equality
  • if the rate is decreased, the annual pension cost
    and the present value of the benefits will
    increase
  • if the rate is increased, the annual pension cost
    and the present value of the benefits will
    decrease


24
Nonoperating Revenue and Expense
Potential areas include
  • Gains (losses) from sales of assets
  • Interest income
  • Equity income
  • Income taxes
  • Unusual items
  • Discontinued operations
  • Accounting changes
  • Extraordinary items


25
Nonoperating Revenue and Expense (cont.)
18. Gains (losses) from sales of assets
The sale of a major asset is sometimes made to
increase earnings and/or to generate needed cash
when the firm is performing poorly. Such
transactions are not part of the normal
operations of the firm and should be excluded
from net income when considering the future
operating potential of the company

26
Nonoperating Revenue and Expense (cont.)
19. Interest income
In assessing earnings quality, the analyst should
be alert to the materiality and variability in
the amount of interest income because it is not
part of operating income

27
Nonoperating Revenue and Expense (cont.)
20. Equity income
The net effect of using this method is that the
investor, in most cases, records more income than
is received in cash

28
Nonoperating Revenue and Expense (cont.)
22. Unusual items
Analyst should always investigate these items by
reading the notes and the MDA to determine if
these items are nonoperating and/or
nonrecurring Also called special charges

29
Nonoperating Revenue and Expense (cont.)
23. Discontinued operations
Should be excluded in considering future
earnings Appropriate to deduct the income on
discontinued operations each year from earnings
for comparative purposes

30
Nonoperating Revenue and Expense (cont.)
25. Extraordinary items
Gains and losses that are both unusual and
infrequent in nature Amounts should be
eliminated from earnings when evaluating a firms
future earnings potential

31
Other Issues
Potential areas include
  • 26. Material changes in number of shares
  • outstanding
  • Operating earnings, a.k.a. core earnings,
  • or EBITDA


32
Other Issues (cont.)
26. Material changes in number of shares
outstanding
  • Changes can result from treasury stock purchases
    and the purchase and retirement of a firms own
    common stock
  • Reasons for the repurchase of common stock should
    be determined if possible to see if firm is
    spending scarce resources to merely increase
    earnings per share (EPS)


33
Other Issues (cont.)
  • Operating earnings, a.k.a. core earnings,
  • pro forma earnings, or EBITDA

Operating earnings are important for assessing
the ongoing potential of a firm Variety of
company created numbers have been created for
users to review
Core earnings Operating Earnings Before Interest,
Tax, Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA)

34
What are the Real Earnings?
Each individual user of financial statements
should adjust the earnings figure to reflect what
they believe is relevant to the decision at hand

35
Quality of Financial Reporting-The Balance Sheet
Items discussed in the earnings quality section
such as the value attached to accounts
receivable, inventory and long-term assets also
impact balance sheet quality Other items to
assess and evaluate include..

36
Quality of Financial Reporting-The Balance Sheet
(cont.)
  • Type of debt used to finance assets should
    generally be matched (short-term debt for current
    assets and long-term debt/equity for long-term
    assets)
  • Commitments and Contingencies disclosures in
    the notes should be carefully evaluated as
    information on off-balance-sheet financing and
    other complex financing arrangements are located
    here


37
Quality of Financial Reporting-The Statement of
Cash Flows
The cash flows from operations (CFO) figure,
while highly useful, can be manipulated by
  • Recording operating expenses as capital
    expenditures
  • Managing current asset and liability accounts to
    cause increases to CFO


38
Quality of Financial Reporting-The Statement of
Cash Flows (cont.)
Cash flows from the following types of items
should be removed from CFO for analytical
purposes
  • Investments in trading securities
  • Discontinued operations
  • Nonrecurring expenses or income


39
Turkish Companies-Public
Manipulation-Earnings Overstatement 65 Manipulat
ion-Earnings Understatement 22 Manipulation-Othe
r 13
40
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