Statement of Cash Flows - Lesson 1 - YouTube

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Welcome, welcome to a fun and exciting area called statement of cash flows.
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Cash flows, very heavily tested.
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Very important area, we are going to probably spend an hour, hour and a half on this right
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now.
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In different sections or different little video clips, but it's going to be a really
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important area.
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You need to understand this, heavily tested on the exam.
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Very important for real world, right?
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You are out there doing a job.
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This is stuff we're going to cover both for GAAP and then at the very end of the section
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under IFRS and the comparisons and differences.
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Alright, statement of cash flows.
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So we've got our statements.
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Whose statements are these?
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Management's, right?
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Management is responsible for the preparation for the content, and so on.
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A complete set of financial statements is a balance sheet, income statements, and statement
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of changes in stock holder's equity, statement of cash flows, other comprehensive income,
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and things like that.
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So a statement of cash flows is just this.
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It talks about how much cash did I have at the beginning of the year burning a hole in
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my pocket, how much cash do I have at the end of the year?
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We are looking at the difference between the beginning and the end and we are trying to
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see, what are the ch-ch-ch-changes in cash?
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So what it tells me is, how much cash do I have at the beginning, how much cash do I
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have at the end?
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The difference is the increase or decrease in cash.
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So let's say for example at the beginning of the year I had $100, at the end of the
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year I have $250.
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That means I've got $150 more cash burning a hole in my pocket.
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My job is to figure out, where did this cash come from?
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As we look at this we are going to see the cash could come from either operating activities
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or investing activities or financing activities.
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You are going to see this plus or minus this plus or minus this equals the net change.
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So what we are trying to do is say, 锟紿ey, I've got $150 more money in my pocket, where
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did it come from?"
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Where did that money come from?
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That's the purpose of the statement of cash flows.
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So what we're going to have to do is understand, first of all, what is the definition of cash,
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because we are talking about the change of cash.
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The other thing is, we need to define what these activities are.
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The FASB very carefully defined investing and financing.
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If it's not investing or financing, what is?
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Boom, operating.
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Operating is like the catch-all.
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If you don't know where to put it, put it in operating.
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So that's what we're looking at as far as where the amounts are coming from.
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We've got operating, investing and financing.
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FASB carefully defines investing and financing.
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Everything else is what?
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Operating.
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So again, the key is the change.
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?Ch-ch-ch-changes, and face the strain ? who sang that song, many years ago?
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D-d-d-d-David Bowie.
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Ch-changes, there you go!
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Alright, looking at notes it says, "Statement of cash flows is required whenever a company
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presents their results of operations".
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So you provide an income statement you've got to have a statement of cash flows.
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The purpose is to provide in-flows and out-flows, sources and uses.
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What is the source of money coming in, what is the use of money going out?
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Where did the money come from, where is the money going to?
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That's our sources and uses.
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Now, we talk about cash, right, what is cash?
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We know what cash is, that's the green stuff you carry around, makes you popular, gets
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you friends, and gets you dates, right, you could buy a date.
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What is the cash equivalent?
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Because it's cash and cash equivalents.
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That's the first balance on the balance sheet.
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Cash equivalent is a highly liquid investment with an original, key word is original, maturity
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of three months or less.
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Highly liquid, original maturity of three months or less.
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If you look in your notes it says, "Easily convertible into known amounts of cash."
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So it's highly liquid.
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"And original maturity of three months or less from the date of purchase".
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What that means for example, is, original maturity to you the purchaser.
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For example, I have a one year CD.
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A one year bank certificate of deposit.
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I've had it for, it's a one year CD, and I've had it for nine months, eight months.
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What is the original to me?
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One year, it's still an investment.
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Example two: You have a one year CD that matures in a week.
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I buy it from you, what is the original maturity to me?
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A week, so it's like debit cash, credit cash.
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On the balance sheet it's kind of a wash, right?
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It's like, debit cash equivalent, credit cash, but where does it show up on the balance sheet?
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Cash and cash equivalents, it's the same line item.
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Again, if the original maturity to me is three months or less, cash, cash.
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If it's longer than three months, investment cash.
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So it goes into the investing which would be and investing activity.
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So that's the first thing you need to understand as far as what shows up there on the statement
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of cash flows.
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As I said earlier, there are three different categories, what are they?
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Operating, investing and financing.
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The reason I like to cover this later in the course is because of the fact that all of
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this deals with journal entries that we had to learn.
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Now we've finally gone through journal entries like making a sale.
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Journal entries like equity method, cost method.
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We've talked about all these different areas, deferred taxes.
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That before we hadn't talked about.
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Now that we've covered them, now we can go through and actually look at a statement of
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cash flows and have it make some sense because there are so many entries on there.
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We've got to figure out how each of these journal entries affects cash and cash equivalents.