Financing
Activities
The
third part of a cash flow statement shows the cash flow from all financing activities. Typical sources of cash flow
include cash raised by selling stocks and bonds or borrowing from banks. Likewise, paying back a bank loan would
show up as a use of cash flow.
Read the
Footnotes
A horse
called “Read The Footnotes” ran in the 2004 Kentucky Derby. He finished seventh, but if he had won, it would have
been a victory for financial literacy proponents everywhere. It’s so important to read the footnotes. The
footnotes to financial statements are packed with information. Here are some of the highlights:
-
Significant
accounting policies and practices – Companies are required to
disclose the accounting policies that are most important to the portrayal of the company’s financial condition
and results. These often require management’s most difficult, subjective or complex
judgments.
-
Income
taxes –
The footnotes provide detailed information about the company’s current and deferred income taxes. The
information is broken down by level – federal, state, local and/or foreign, and the main items that affect the
company’s effective tax rate are described.
-
Pension plans and
other retirement programs – The footnotes discuss the
company’s pension plans and other retirement or post-employment benefit programs. The notes contain specific
information about the assets and costs of these programs, and indicate whether and by how much the plans are
over- or under-funded.
-
Stock
options –
The notes also contain information about stock options granted to officers and employees, including the method
of accounting for stock-based compensation and the effect of the method on reported results.
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