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Understanding Financial Statements

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A supplementary text for a variety of Business courses, including Financial Statement Analysis, Principles of Financial Accounting, Intermediate Accounting, Investments, Personal Finance, and Financial Planning and Analysis. Understanding Financial Statements, retains its reputation for readability, concise coverage, and accessibility while incorporating the many new requirements and changes in accounting reporting and standards. The text gives students the conceptual background and analytical tools necessary to understand and interpret business financial statements. Its ultimate goal is to improve students' ability to translate financial statement numbers into a meaningful map for business decisions and thus enable each student to approach financial statements with enhanced confidence.

274 pages, Paperback

First published February 1, 1988

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About the author

Lyn M. Fraser

12 books1 follower

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5 stars
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3 stars
36 (33%)
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for John Ryan.
353 reviews3 followers
December 13, 2022
Good resource on corporate financial statements for the novice or one who needs a quick refresher. The book includes many case studies, exercises, and little tests. While I didn’t complete the tests, it would be helpful to those who are just now looking at these financial issues.

This book is both simple and complex. The authors highlight that auditors are hired by the firm therefore may be cautious at how they raise issues. The book also reviews all the complications of reviewing the health of a company, and all the discretionary issues that could make the balance sheet look better than reality. The authors review the various ways depreciation can be figured – with the pros and cons of each.

Many areas mentioned in the report are common sense and sometimes complicated such as FIFO – first in, first out -- and LIFO – last in, first out versus last in. The authors explain why this impacts the bottom line. The most important area of the book was the section reviewing how to analyze financial statements. This chapter shared the various perspectives of using a review – from the creditor, the investor, or from management. Sources included the auditor’s report, management discussion and analysis, supplementary schedules, the SEC forms 10-K and 10-Q (including material litigation and government actions), and various widely used databases such as Dun and Bradstreet and Standard and Poor.

The book concluded with a summary of financial ratios and glossary of financial terms.
Profile Image for Maribel.
38 reviews1 follower
October 8, 2018
I had to read this for a designation I'm working on. The first three chapters were fundamental, the 4th chapter on cash flows I found super confusing and the final chapter on ratios wasn't bad. Considering the material it could have been worse but I did have to seek out supplemental material because I still don't feel that I have a solid grasp of the subject matter. I'm so glad I am done with this!
3 reviews1 follower
December 11, 2020
It’s a good book but

It’s a good book for people that need to understand a financial statement. It’s a basic book not intermediate. I’m going to have to go over the cash flow statement section of the book. in my opinion the author doesn’t do a good job in explaining how it works! There’s to much explanation! A lot of reading for a concept that can be explained very simply but the authors fail to do that!
91 reviews
Want to read
June 19, 2024
Recommended after taking the CLP course Financial Intelligence
Profile Image for Sarah.
53 reviews1 follower
November 19, 2015
This is a great resource for anyone in the business world as either background knowledge or for an investor, manager/leader, or creditor. For the most part, the text was easy to read and understand, but there were a few areas that were confusing. For future editions, it would be great to have a summary of Chapter 5's financial analysis ratios at the end of the chapter or in an appendix. This summary should contain what the ratio is, what it means, how the calculation is labeled, and whether a low or high value is preferred or not preferred.
Profile Image for Jeanne.
98 reviews
February 22, 2008
Oh my gosh, I hate to admit it, but numbers are just NOT my strong suit!
12 reviews
July 8, 2008
A good introduction to reading financial statements. It is not too heavy or technical.
6 reviews
January 8, 2009
This is the best place to start if you're interested in investment analysis. If you understand this book then you can jump right to "How to Value any Asset" or the McKinsey & Co. book on valuation.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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