Each views a company’s financials from a different angle.
When combined, they provide a more complete view of a company’s true financial position.
1A: Balance Sheet
This tells you a company’s net worth at a specific point in time.
Layout:
1B: What I focus on first:
1⃣ Cash & Equivalents: How much?
2⃣ Debt: How much vs. cash?
3⃣ Goodwill: How much?
4⃣ Retained Earnings (+ T.S.): Positive?
5⃣ Receivables & Inventory: How much?
1C: Best Possible Answers
1⃣Cash & Equivalents: More than debt
2⃣Short & Long-Debt: None
3⃣Goodwill: Zero
4⃣Retained Earnings (+ T.S.): Positive
5⃣ Receivables & Inventory: None
2A: The Income Statement
This tells you if a company is “profitable” or not during a period of time
Layout:
2B: I look at 2 income statements with comparable periods.
What I focus on first:
1⃣Revenue: Up or down?
2⃣Gross Profit: Up or down?
3⃣EPS (Diluted): Positive or negative?
4⃣Shares Outstanding: Up or down?
5⃣Operating Expenses: Up or down?
2C: Best Possible Answers
1⃣Revenue: Up 30%+
2⃣Gross Profit: Up 30%+
3⃣EPS: Up 30%+
4⃣Shares Outstanding: Down 4%+
5⃣Operating Expenses: Stable
3A: The Cash Flow Statement
This tells you how cash moves in and out of a business over a period of time.
Layout:
3B: What I focus on first:
1⃣OCF: Positive or negative?
2⃣CapEx: More or less than OCF?
3⃣NCC: Any big numbers? S.B.C.?
4⃣Stock: Issuance or buybacks?
5⃣Debt: Borrow or repay?
3C: Best possible answers
1⃣ OCF: Positive (+ Growing)
2⃣CapEx: Much less than OCF
3⃣NCC: Nothing noteworthy + Low SBC
4⃣Stock: Buybacks ✅
5⃣Debt: Repayment✅
I’d never make an investment decision without MUCH more analysis than this.
Accounting (and investing) is FILLED with nuance
Still, with <1 minute of analysis per financial statement, you can quickly identify a company's strengths + weaknesses
If you invest, you MUST learn accounting
That's why @Brian_Stoffel_ and I created a course that teaches accounting in plain English
Registration closes TONIGHT (9/18) at 11:59 PM EDT!