3. It is often helpful to the analyst to decompose a firm’s ROE ratio into the product of several
accounting ratios and to analyze their separate behavior over time and across companies within
an industry. A useful breakdown is
ROE
5
Net profits
Pretax profits
3
Pretax profits
EBIT
3
EBIT
Sales
3
Sales
Assets
3
Assets
Equity
4. Other accounting ratios that have a bearing on a firm’s profitability and/or risk are fixed-asset
turnover, inventory turnover, days sales in receivables, and the current, quick, and interest
coverage ratios.
5. Two ratios that make use of the market price of the firm’s common stock in addition to its finan-
cial statements are the ratios of market to book value and price to earnings. Analysts sometimes
take low values for these ratios as a margin of safety or a sign that the stock is a bargain.
6. Good firms are not necessarily good investments. Stock market prices of successful firms may
be bid up to levels that reflect that success. If so, the price of these firms relative to their earn-
ings prospects may not constitute a bargain.
7. A major problem in the use of data obtained from a firm’s financial statements is comparabil-
ity. Firms have a great deal of latitude in how they choose to compute various items of revenue
and expense. It is, therefore, necessary for the security analyst to adjust accounting earnings
and financial ratios to a uniform standard before attempting to compare financial results across
firms.
8. Comparability problems can be acute in a period of inflation. Inflation can create distortions in
accounting for inventories, depreciation, and interest expense.
9. Fair value or mark-to-market accounting requires that most assets be valued at current market
value rather than historical cost. This policy has proved to be controversial because ascertaining
true market value in many instances is difficult, and critics contend that financial statements
are therefore unduly volatile. Advocates argue that financial statements should reflect the best
estimate of current asset values.
10. International financial reporting standards have become progressively accepted throughout the
world, including the United States. They differ from traditional U.S. GAAP procedures in that
they are principles-based rather than rules-based.
Related Web sites
for this chapter are
available at www.
mhhe.com/bkm
income statement
economic earnings
accounting earnings
balance sheet
statement of cash flows
return on assets (ROA)
return on equity (ROE)
economic value added
residual income
DuPont system
profit margin
return on sales
total asset turnover
interest coverage ratio
times interest earned
leverage ratio
inventory turnover ratio
average collection period
liquidity
current ratio
quick ratio
acid test ratio
cash ratio
market–book-value ratio
price–earnings (P/E) ratio
LIFO
FIFO
fair value accounting
mark-to-market accounting
quality of earnings
international financial
reporting standards
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