What is Statement of Cash Flows?
The Statement of Cash Flows is a key financial document that summarizes the amount of cash and cash equivalents entering and leaving a company over a specific period. It is one of the primary financial statements, along with the balance sheet and income statement, and provides valuable information about a company’s cash management. Here’s a more detailed description of each section:
- Operating Activities:
- Cash Inflows: Cash received from customers for sales of goods or services.
- Cash Outflows: Payments made to suppliers for inventory, salaries and wages to employees, interest payments, and tax payments.
- Adjustments: Non-cash items like depreciation, amortization, and changes in working capital (e.g., accounts receivable, accounts payable, inventory).
This section essentially converts the items reported on the income statement from the accrual basis of accounting to cash.
- Investing Activities:
- Cash Inflows: Proceeds from the sale of property, plant, and equipment (PPE), sales of investments, and repayments of loans made to others.
- Cash Outflows: Purchases of PPE, purchases of investments, and loans made to others.
Investing activities reflect the company’s expenditures and proceeds from long-term assets and other investments not included in cash equivalents.
- Financing Activities:
- Cash Inflows: Proceeds from issuing shares or bonds, borrowing money.
- Cash Outflows: Repayments of borrowings, repurchasing shares, and paying dividends.
This section details the sources of cash from investors and creditors and the uses of cash to pay them.
Importance of the Statement of Cash Flows:
- Liquidity and Solvency: It provides insight into a company’s ability to generate cash to meet its obligations.
- Operational Efficiency: Helps assess the efficiency of a company’s core operations.
- Financial Health: Investors and creditors use it to understand the financial health and stability of a company.
- Investment Decisions: It helps in making informed investment decisions by showing how a company is financing its operations and growth.
Overall, the Statement of Cash Flows is an essential tool for understanding the actual cash movements within a business, providing a clear picture of its financial dynamics beyond the accrual-based measures reflected in the income statement and balance sheet.
OTHER TERMS BEGINNING WITH "S"
- Sales Ledger
- Schedule of Accounts
- Seasonality
- Secured Asset
- Secured Line of Credit
- Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR)
- Senior Debt
- Servicing Fees
- Shareholder Equity
- Short-Term Debt
- Short-Term Liabilities
- Small & Medium Enterprise (SME) Financing
- Small Business Financing
- Small Business Loan
- Solvency
- Special Assets Department
- Sponsor-Backed Coverage
- Spot Factoring
- Stakeholder
- Startup Stage
- Statement of Work
- Stretch Financing (Stretch Loan)
- Subordinated Term Loan
- Subordination Agreement
- Subsidiary Ledger
- Supplier Finance
- Supply Chain Financing
- Supply Chain Management
- Suppressed Availability