Front cover image for How to read a financial report : wringing vital signs out of the numbers

How to read a financial report : wringing vital signs out of the numbers

Hidden somewhere among all the numbers in a financial report is vitally important information about where a company has been and where it is going. This title aims to help readers of financial reports cut through the maze of accounting information to find out what those numbers really mean.
Print Book, English, 2004
Wiley, New York, 2004
216 Seiten
9780471478676, 0471478679
249145013
1. Starting with Cash Flows.2. Introducing the Balance Sheet and Income Statement.3. Profit Isn't Everything.4. Sales Revenue and Accounts Receivable.5. Cost of Goods Sold Expense and Inventory.6. Inventory and Accounts Payable.7. Operating Expenses and Accounts Payable.8. Operating Expenses and Prepaid Expenses.9. Long-Term Operating Assets: Depreciation and Amortization Expense.10. Accruing Unpaid Operating Expenses and Interest Expense.11. Income Tax Expense and Income Tax Payable.12. Net Income and Retained Earnings; Earnings per Share (EPS).13. Cash Flow from Profit and Loss.14. Cash Flows from Investing and Financing Activities.15. Growth, Decline, and Cash Flow.16. Footnotes-The Fine Print in Financial Reports.17. CPAs, Audits, and Audit Failures.18. Choosing Accounting Methods and Quality of Earnings.19. Making and Changing Accounting Standards.20. Cost of Goods Sold Conundrum.21. Depreciation Dilemmas.22. Ratios for Creditors and Investors.23. A Look Inside Management Accounting.24. A Few Parting Comments.Index.
Previous edition: 1999