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Financial ratio analysis - YouTube
Channel: The Finance Storyteller
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How does financial ratio analysis work?
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Let’s discuss ten of the most popular financial
ratios that can help you find the story behind
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the numbers.
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What do you need to get started on a financial
ratio analysis?
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You need an income statement,
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the overview of how much profit a company made during a year.
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You also need a balance sheet, an overview
of what a company owns and what a company
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owes at a specific point in time.
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We will start off with financial ratios that
only focus on the income statement, then look
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at financial ratios that only focus on the
balance sheet, and end with powerful financial
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ratios that combine information from the income
statement and the balance sheet.
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Performing a financial ratio analysis has
a scientific element to it (finding data and
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putting it into formulas), as well as an artistic
element (assigning meaning to the outcome
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of the calculations, and seeing the big picture).
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Part 1: financial ratios that only focus on the income statement,
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or profit and loss statement (P&L).
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Let’s compare the income statements of two
fictitious companies, which unlike real life
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companies have nice round numbers in their financial statements.
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The first step in financial ratio analysis
of the income statement,
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is to make everything relative.
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Relative to sales that is.
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Each of the cost line items and profit subtotals
is expressed as a percentage of revenue.
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Let’s see what the financial ratios tell us.
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Company A has a Gross Profit margin of 50%,
company B of 30%, so the Gross Profit margin
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is 20%-points higher for company A. Company
A makes far more margin than company B on
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the products or services it sells.
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Company A has an Operating Margin of 21%,
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while company B has an Operating Margin of 14%.
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So the 20%-point difference (50% versus 30%)
on the Gross Profit level has shrunk to 7%-points
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(21% versus 14%) on the Operating Margin level.
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Net income as percentage of sales (often called
“Return On Sales”) is 16% for company
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A, and 8% for company B.
What do we zoom in on for further analysis?
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Let’s investigate the difference between
Gross Profit and Operating Margin.
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This is mainly driven by selling, general
and administrative expenses: 20% of revenue
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in company A, 10% of revenue in company B.
The non-manufacturing costs for functional
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departments like sales, marketing, finance,
HR, sourcing, legal and IT are far higher
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for company A than for company B.
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This could be related to the industry each
company is in, the company’s strategy, or
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the level of efficiency that it has achieved.
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Could company A be overspending in SG&A, or
is company B underspending?
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Hard to say just from these numbers, but worth
investigating!
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On the Research and Development line, company
A is spending more than company B.
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This is usually seen as a good thing, as today’s
Research and Development expenses hopefully
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lead to high margin innovative products and
services to sell in the future.
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Part 2: financial ratios that only focus on
the balance sheet.
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The first question that I always ask myself
is: how is the company doing on liquidity,
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is it likely to be able to pay its bills in
the short term?
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Let’s look at the current assets (cash plus
items that are likely to convert to cash within
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a year) versus the current liabilities (items
that need to be paid with cash within a year).
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A useful financial ratio in this area is the
current ratio: simply divide the current assets
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by the current liabilities.
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For company A, 400 divided by 200 is 2.
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For every dollar of current liabilities, there
are two dollars of current assets, a “safe”
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position (from the perspective of business continuity).
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For company B, 200 divided by 400 is 0.5.
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For every dollar of current liabilities, there
is only 50 cents of current assets, a “more
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risky” position (for a supplier that is
hoping to get paid).
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While on the topic of current assets and current
liabilities, let’s calculate the amount
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of working capital utilized by the companies:
accounts receivable plus inventories minus
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accounts payable.
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For company A, this is 150 plus 200 minus
200, in total 150.
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For company B, this is 50 plus 100 minus 300,
in total negative 150.
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Company B seems to be getting paid by customers
before they have to pay suppliers, and holds
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a low level of stock.
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The next financial ratio is all about the
companies’ financing strategy: does it primarily
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borrow money to finance operations, or rely
on capital provided by the shareholders?
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The debt-to-equity ratio can help you put
that in perspective.
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For company A, 100 in borrowings, 700 in equity,
so a debt-to-equity ratio of 1 to 7.
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You could call this a conservative and robust
way of financing, with a big buffer of equity
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that helps defend the business continuity
of the company in case of future losses.
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For company B, 400 in borrowings, 100 in equity,
so a debt-to-equity ratio of 4 to 1.
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For every dollar of shareholder capital (equity),
there are four dollars borrowed, which is
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possibly more fragile.
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A related financial ratio is equity as percentage
of the balance sheet total.
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70% for company A, 12.5% for company B. Based
on the debt-to-equity ratio, and equity as
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percentage of total, you could say that company
A has a low leverage, while company B has
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a high leverage.
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Part 3: financial ratios that combine information
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from the income statement and the balance sheet.
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This is where you might see new storylines
and connections, on top of what you discovered
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in analyzing the income statement individually
and the balance sheet individually.
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Let’s start with a “big picture” financial
ratio called Return On Equity, which is Net
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Income divided by Equity.
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For company A, 160 divided by 700, which is 22.9%.
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For company B, 80 divided by 100, which is 80%.
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On the Return On Equity metric, company B far outperforms company A.
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What is driving that?
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While company A has higher profit margins
(as we saw in the income statement analysis),
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company B has a much higher financial leverage
(as we saw in the balance sheet analysis).
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There is a third component to the Return OnEquity calculation:
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the financial ratio called asset turnover.
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Asset turnover looks at how much revenue is
generated by the company
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with the assets it has.
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For company A, asset turnover is 1.
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1000 in assets on the balance sheet generates
1000 in revenue in the income statement.
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For company B, asset turnover is 1.25.
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Let’s dig a little deeper into two key subsets
of this asset turnover ratio.
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The first one is receivables turnover: the
number of times per year that a business collects
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its average accounts receivable, the ratio
between revenue in the income statement and
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accounts receivable on the balance sheet.
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6.67 for company A, 20 for company B. Receivables
turnover might be a bit abstract for a lot
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of people, so let’s turn it into a more
tangible related metric called Days Sales
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Outstanding: how many days does a company
need to wait before a customer pays.
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55 days for company A, and just 18 days for company B.
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The second subset of the asset turnover ratio is inventory turnover:
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the number of times per year that a business turns
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its inventory, the ratio between revenue in
the income statement
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and inventory on the balance sheet.
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5 inventory turns for company A, 10 inventory
turns for company B.
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So what do financial ratios tell us?
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Can we say, based on calculating these financial
ratios that company A is in better financial
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shape, or company B is in better financial shape?
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Not necessarily.
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Financial ratios do provide us with clear
information about the financial footprint
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of a company, and deepen your understanding
of the strategic and operational story behind
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the financial numbers.
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In this video on financial ratio analysis,
we covered ten financial ratios:
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On the income statement: gross profit %, operating
margin %, return on sales %
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On the balance sheet: current ratio, debt-to-equity,
equity as % of total
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When linking the P&L and the balance sheet:
return on equity, asset turnover, receivables
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turnover, inventory turnover
Financial ratio analysis is as much an art
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as it is a science!
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Want to learn more about business, finance
and accounting?
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Then subscribe to the Finance Storyteller
YouTube channel!
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Thank you.
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