Quiz-3 Illustrative Financial Statement (Cash Flow, Indirect Method)
Course Content:
The Cash Flow Statement explains how cash moves in and out of a company. Unlike the P&L (which includes non-cash items), the Cash Flow Statement shows actual liquidity – essential for assessing solvency.
IAS 7 requires three sections:
1. Operating Activities – day-to-day cash generation (receipts from customers, payments to suppliers/employees).
o Indirect Method: Start with Net Profit → adjust for non-cash items (depreciation, provisions) → adjust for changes in working capital (inventory, receivables, payables).
2. Investing Activities – purchase/sale of PPE, investments, intangibles.
3. Financing Activities – cash from issuing shares, borrowings, repayments, dividends paid.
Key IFRS points:
· Non-cash transactions (e.g., acquiring machinery with a loan) are excluded from cash flows but disclosed in notes.
· Interest/dividends may be classified as operating, investing, or financing (choice allowed, but consistency required).
·
Cash equivalents = short-term, highly liquid investments (<3
months maturity).
2. FAQ
- Q:
What is the purpose of a Cash Flow Statement?
A: To show how cash is generated and used in operating, investing, and financing activities. - Q:
What are the three main sections of a cash flow statement?
A: Operating, Investing, and Financing activities. - Q:
What is the indirect method?
A: It starts with net profit, then adjusts for non-cash items (depreciation, provisions) and working capital changes to arrive at operating cash flows. - Q:
How are non-cash transactions presented?
A: Not included in cash flows, but disclosed in notes (e.g., acquiring assets via loan). - Q:
Where should dividends paid be classified?
A: Under Financing Activities (though interest/dividends received/paid may vary, consistency is key). - Q:
How do cash and cash equivalents differ?
A: Cash = cash on hand and bank balances; equivalents = short-term, highly liquid investments readily convertible to cash. - Q:
Why is cash flow more reliable than profit in liquidity analysis?
A: Because profit includes non-cash items, while cash flow shows actual liquidity available for obligations.
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