Most readers have familiarity with the basic layout of a financial model. For those lacking that familiarity, let me borrow a trick from crappy resume-writing and just tell you the objective: to show a company's income statement, balance sheet and cash flow statement projected into the future, with the ability to change assumptions for various accounts and display their impact on each of the statements. So let's start with the basic framework of a financial model, which a VP once told me is not much different from a fine-tuned automobile:
- Steering wheel (controls / assumptions)
- Axes and tires (formulas / financial statements)
- Interior furnishing/paint job (formatting)
- Higher likelihood that Asian females would crash it (ditto)
Does this also mean Asian males would soup up their models with "Toyota Racing" decals and nitrous oxide engines? Cause that might be 2 fast, 2 furious. |
But enough nonsense. For a model to work mechanically (disregarding how realistic the numbers may be), you need acertain number of inputs (they only need to be numbers to start off), and the rest of the model will all be calculations based on these inputs. At the most advanced levels, these inputs become models within themselves, driven by many underlying functions and assumptions. For example, a basic model may show revenue as $100 million for each of the next five years. However, a slightly more advanced model will show revenue as a function of annual growth percentages. Further, a complex model may show revenue as a function of several individual customers or accounts, with each based on numerous assumptions for price, volume, market size, etc.
So here is the basic framework, along with which inputs will drive the model. Again, many future posts will be dedicated to transforming these numbers into more complex, functional formulas.
Income Statement
- Revenue - COGS - operating expenses = operating income
- Operating income + interest income - interest expense = pre-tax income
- Pre-tax income - taxes = net income
- Assets = cash + current assets (accounts receivable, inventory, prepaid expenses, etc.) + long-term assets (PP&E, etc.)
- Cash = previous year's balance + net cash flow
- PP&E = previous year's balance + capital expenditures - D&A
- Liabilities = current liabilities (accounts payable, deferred revenue, etc.) + debt + long-term liabilities
- Debt = previous year's balance + debt issuance - debt repayment
- Shareholders' equity =
- Retained earnings = previous year's balance + net income - dividends
- Share capital (is this what you call it? I got fired from an accounting internship) = previous year's balance + stock issuance - stock repurchase
- Assets = liabilities + shareholder's equity
- Cash flow from operations = net income + D&A - increases in working capital
- Cash flow from investing activities = - capital expenditures
- Cash flow from financing activities = debt issuance - debt repayment + stock issuance - stock repurchase - dividends
- Cash flow from operations + cash flow from investing activities + cash flow from financing activities = net cash flow
-F-One