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Cash Flows Do Not Reveal Financial Condition

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The cash flows summary for the year does not reveal the financial condition of the company. Managers certainly need to know which assets the business owns and the amounts of each asset, which can include cash, receivables, inventory, among others. Also, they need to know which liabilities the company owes and the amounts of each.

Business managers have the responsibility for keeping the company in a position to pay its liabilities when they come due. In other words, managers have to keep the business solvent (able to pay its liabilities on time) and liquid (having enough available cash to meet its needs). Furthermore, managers have to know whether assets are too large (or too small) relative to the sales volume of the business. A company’s lenders and investors want to know the same things.

In brief, both the managers inside the business and the lenders and investors outside the business need a summary of a company’s financial condition (its assets and liabilities). They also need a profit performance report, which summarizes the company’s sales revenue, expenses, and profit for the year.

In this chapter we have explained that a cash flows summary has its limits—in particular, it does not report profit and does not present the financial condition of a business. Nevertheless, a cash flows summary is useful. In fact, a different version of what is shown in Exhibit 1.1 is one of the three primary financial statements reported by every business. But in no sense does a cash flows summary take the place of the profit performance report or the financial condition report. The next chapter introduces these two financial statements. Chapter 3 then moves on to the statement of cash flows, which is a more formal financial statement than the summary discussed in this chapter.

How to Read a Financial Report

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