Analysing the Profit & Loss Statement Use these ratios to make comparisons This year to one or more previous years Year to date to previous full financial years Year to date to previous equivalent Year To Date Analysing the Balance Sheet Use these ratios to make comparisons Today’s date to one or more previous periods equivalent dates Compare debtors days to creditors days Compare actual debtors days to the terms the business has set in its debtors policy Gross Profit % Indicates how efficiently the business operates in selling its product or service. Look at this for the entire business, or for individual income streams of the business. Gross Profit % = (Gross Profit Income) x 100 Net Profit % Indicates what proportion of the sales dollar ends up as net profit. Look at this for the entire business, or for individual businesses in the entire business. Net Profit % = (Net Profit Income) x 100 Analyse Income Indicates the income stream which contributes the most revenue, and if affected will have the most significant impact on turnover. Proportion calculated as: (Income line item Total Income) x 100 Note: Proportions from every line item added together should equal 100% © tidytax 2012 all rights reserved Analyse Overheads Indicates which overhead expenses contribute significantly to overall overheads and resulting net profit. If affected these will have the most significant impact on net profit. Compare actual creditors days to the terms the business has agreed with suppliers Liquidity Roughly indicates whether the business can pay debts as & when they fall due. There are a number of ways to calculate this. Current Ratio = Total Current Assets Total Current Liabilities If the business’ current assets have a high proportion of prepayments or inventory in them, then use the Quick Ratio. Quick Ratio = (Total Current Assets - Inventory - Prepayments) Total Current Liabilities Debtor Days Indicates on average how many days it takes debtors to pay their debts. Calculate this on a global basis or break this down to individual customers. Debtor Days = (Total Debtors Sales) x days in the year Creditor Days Indicates on average how many days it takes the business to pay its debts to creditors. Proportion calculated as: (Overhead line item Total Overheads) x 100 Calculate this on a global basis or break this down to individual suppliers. Note: Proportions from every line item added together should equal 100% Creditor Days = (Total Creditors Sales) x days in the year For resources just for Bookkeepers visit... www.tidytax.com.au Cashflow Cashflow Statement This historical report shows how cash has moved through the business for a given period. The Cash Flow Statement uses Net Profit as the starting point. That is, Net Income should equal Net Income per the Profit and Loss Statement. It then adds back or subtracts the non cash items in the accounts to calculate cash generated from business activities. It then adds back or subtracts other non business cash flows from investing and financing to show how the closing balance of the bank account has eventuated. The Cash at the End of the Period should equal the total of the bank account(s) in the Balance Sheet. In this example, the business took out loans of $65,000. However, if it had received repayments from A. Person and had a better debt collection policy, the bank account may not have been overdrawn. Cashflow Forecast Cash Flow Forecast Opening Cash Balance Week 1 $ Actual Week 2 $ Week 3 $ Week 4 $ Incoming Cash Sales Debtors Interest Top Ups by owner Total $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ Outgoing Cash Direct Debit Auto Payments Loan Repayments Creditors Wages Super PAYGW BAS PAYG Instalments Drawings by owner Total $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ Closing Cash Balance $ $ $ $ The Cashflow Forecast is a forward looking estimate of what cashflows might look like so that the business can plan. This is an example, however, consider what’s most appropriate for the business: Has the cash effect of every account in the Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Statement been included appropriately? How long should the forward estimate be? Should the estimate be daily, weekly or monthly? How summarised should the statement be? Budgeting - where to start Understand what your normal operations will be next year and assign dollar amounts to that Find out if the environment will force changes on you in the next year and assign dollar amounts to that Decide what you would like to implement in the upcoming year and assign dollar amounts to that Add these parts together to understand what your complete budget will look like For resources just for Bookkeepers visit... www.tidytax.com.au