Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Ratio Analysis
- Financial Statements
- Values published
are absolute
figures
- Difficult to compare different sized businesses
- Need to compare
- Info from a ratio on its own is v.limited
- Past Periods
- Similar businesses
- Objectives/targets
- Types of Ratio
- Profitability
- Liquidity
- Efficiency
- Debt
- Investors
- Gross Profit Percentage
Anmerkungen:
- Gross Profit = Revenue-Cost of sales
- Gross Profit/Revenue X 100
- Relationship
between
revenue and
direct costs
- % of each £ left
after the business
has paid for its
materials, labour etc
- The higher the better
- Important to
competitiors
- Cash
- Comes from: investors
putting in capital, receipts
from sales, sales of
non-current assets,
banks agreeing to loans
and overdrafts
- critical balance between
inflows and outflows
- Big profit doesn't necessarily
mean the business is doing
well
- e.g.overtrading
Anmerkungen:
- This is when a business invests too much in non-current assets(often during rapid expansion) and not enough is kept for day-to-day trading and emergencies.
- liquidity
Anmerkungen:
- Good=business has lots of cash/near cash assets compared to bills
- working capital=current
assets-current liabilities
- Markup
- Amount added to the cost
of sales to give the selling
price
- Net profit Percentage
- profit from operations/revenue X 100
- Profit before finance
and tax deducted
- Represents pure profits earned on
each £ of revenue after expenses
- Return on Capital
Employed(ROCE)
- Rate at which the business is
earning profit relative to the money
invested-relates earnings to the
level of investment in the business
- Profit from operations/capital employed
Anmerkungen:
- Capital employed= shareholder's funds + long term liabilities
- reflects the financial risk
- gives shareholders a
% to compare to the
interest rates
- Asset turnover
- revenue/capital employed
X 100
- link between investment +
income and ultimate profit
- Indicates the efficiency of the
business' use of its assets to
generate revenue.
- great interest to management
- Higher the better but
too high >overtrading
- Earnings per
share(EPS)
- profit after tax/number of ordinary shares
Anmerkungen:
- profit after tax=all costs deducted
- fundamental measure of share performance
- Assesses
potential-relates available
profit for distribution to
number of shares
- trends created
- less shares=more per share
- Business may buy bad shares-lots of shares issued-profits diluted
- Limitations
- must combine with other areas
- accuracy depends on reliability of data
- Differing accountig policies
- Ratios tell us what has happened but not why
- Don't analyse aspects without numbers attached e.g. morale/goodwill