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financial-statements

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Financial Statements

Important: This skill assists with financial statement workflows but does not provide financial advice. All statements should be reviewed by qualified financial professionals before use in reporting or filings.

Formats, GAAP presentation requirements, common adjustments, and flux analysis methodology for income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow statements.

Income Statement

Standard Format (Classification of Expenses by Function)

Revenue
  Product revenue
  Service revenue
  Other revenue
Total Revenue

Cost of Revenue
  Product costs
  Service costs
Total Cost of Revenue

Gross Profit

Operating Expenses
  Research and development
  Sales and marketing
  General and administrative
Total Operating Expenses

Operating Income (Loss)

Other Income (Expense)
  Interest income
  Interest expense
  Other income (expense), net
Total Other Income (Expense)

Income (Loss) Before Income Taxes
  Income tax expense (benefit)
Net Income (Loss)

Earnings Per Share (if applicable)
  Basic
  Diluted

GAAP Presentation Requirements (ASC 220 / IAS 1)

  • Present all items of income and expense recognized in a period
  • Classify expenses either by nature (materials, labor, depreciation) or by function (COGS, R&D, S&M, G&A) — function is more common for US companies
  • If classified by function, disclose depreciation, amortization, and employee benefit costs by nature in the notes
  • Present operating and non-operating items separately
  • Show income tax expense as a separate line
  • Extraordinary items are prohibited under both US GAAP and IFRS
  • Discontinued operations presented separately, net of tax

Common Presentation Considerations

  • Revenue disaggregation: ASC 606 requires disaggregation of revenue into categories that depict how the nature, amount, timing, and uncertainty of revenue are affected by economic factors
  • Stock-based compensation: Classify within the functional expense categories (R&D, S&M, G&A) with total SBC disclosed in notes
  • Restructuring charges: Present separately if material, or include in operating expenses with note disclosure
  • Non-GAAP adjustments: If presenting non-GAAP measures (common in earnings releases), clearly label and reconcile to GAAP

Balance Sheet

Standard Format (Classified Balance Sheet)

ASSETS
Current Assets
  Cash and cash equivalents
  Short-term investments
  Accounts receivable, net
  Inventory
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets
Total Current Assets

Non-Current Assets
  Property and equipment, net
  Operating lease right-of-use assets
  Goodwill
  Intangible assets, net
  Long-term investments
  Other non-current assets
Total Non-Current Assets

TOTAL ASSETS

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current Liabilities
  Accounts payable
  Accrued liabilities
  Deferred revenue, current portion
  Current portion of long-term debt
  Operating lease liabilities, current portion
  Other current liabilities
Total Current Liabilities

Non-Current Liabilities
  Long-term debt
  Deferred revenue, non-current
  Operating lease liabilities, non-current
  Other non-current liabilities
Total Non-Current Liabilities

Total Liabilities

Stockholders' Equity
  Common stock
  Additional paid-in capital
  Retained earnings (accumulated deficit)
  Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
  Treasury stock
Total Stockholders' Equity

TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

GAAP Presentation Requirements (ASC 210 / IAS 1)

  • Distinguish between current and non-current assets and liabilities
  • Current: expected to be realized, consumed, or settled within 12 months (or the operating cycle if longer)
  • Present assets in order of liquidity (most liquid first) — standard US practice
  • Accounts receivable shown net of allowance for credit losses (ASC 326)
  • Property and equipment shown net of accumulated depreciation
  • Goodwill is not amortized — tested for impairment annually (ASC 350)
  • Leases: recognize right-of-use assets and lease liabilities for operating and finance leases (ASC 842)

Cash Flow Statement

Standard Format (Indirect Method)

CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income (loss)
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash from operations:
  Depreciation and amortization
  Stock-based compensation
  Amortization of debt issuance costs
  Deferred income taxes
  Loss (gain) on disposal of assets
  Impairment charges
  Other non-cash items
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
  Accounts receivable
  Inventory
  Prepaid expenses and other assets
  Accounts payable
  Accrued liabilities
  Deferred revenue
  Other liabilities
Net Cash Provided by (Used in) Operating Activities

CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Purchases of property and equipment
  Purchases of investments
  Proceeds from sale/maturity of investments
  Acquisitions, net of cash acquired
  Other investing activities
Net Cash Provided by (Used in) Investing Activities

CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Proceeds from issuance of debt
  Repayment of debt
  Proceeds from issuance of common stock
  Repurchases of common stock
  Dividends paid
  Payment of debt issuance costs
  Other financing activities
Net Cash Provided by (Used in) Financing Activities

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash

Net Increase (Decrease) in Cash and Cash Equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period

GAAP Presentation Requirements (ASC 230 / IAS 7)

  • Indirect method is most common (start with net income, adjust for non-cash items)
  • Direct method is permitted but rarely used (requires supplemental indirect reconciliation)
  • Interest paid and income taxes paid must be disclosed (either on the face or in notes)
  • Non-cash investing and financing activities disclosed separately (e.g., assets acquired under leases, stock issued for acquisitions)
  • Cash equivalents: short-term, highly liquid investments with original maturities of 3 months or less

Common Adjustments and Reclassifications

Period-End Adjustments

  1. Accruals: Record expenses incurred but not yet paid (AP accruals, payroll accruals, interest accruals)
  2. Deferrals: Adjust prepaid expenses, deferred revenue, and deferred costs for the period
  3. Depreciation and amortization: Book periodic depreciation/amortization from fixed asset and intangible schedules
  4. Bad debt provision: Adjust allowance for credit losses based on aging analysis and historical loss rates
  5. Inventory adjustments: Record write-downs for obsolete, slow-moving, or impaired inventory
  6. FX revaluation: Revalue foreign-currency-denominated monetary assets and liabilities at period-end rates
  7. Tax provision: Record current and deferred income tax expense
  8. Fair value adjustments: Mark-to-market investments, derivatives, and other fair-value items

Reclassifications

  1. Current/non-current reclassification: Reclassify long-term debt maturing within 12 months to current
  2. Contra account netting: Net allowances against gross receivables, accumulated depreciation against gross assets
  3. Intercompany elimination: Eliminate intercompany balances and transactions in consolidation
  4. Discontinued operations: Reclassify results of discontinued operations to a separate line item
  5. Equity method adjustments: Record share of investee income/loss for equity method investments
  6. Segment reclassifications: Ensure transactions are properly classified by operating segment

Flux Analysis Methodology

Variance Calculation

For each line item, calculate:

  • Dollar variance: Current period - Prior period (or current period - budget)
  • Percentage variance: (Current - Prior) / |Prior| x 100
  • Basis point change: For margins and ratios, express change in basis points (1 bp = 0.01%)

Materiality Thresholds

Define what constitutes a "material" variance requiring investigation. Common approaches:

  • Fixed dollar threshold: Variances exceeding a set dollar amount (e.g., $50K, $100K)
  • Percentage threshold: Variances exceeding a set percentage (e.g., 10%, 15%)
  • Combined: Either the dollar OR percentage threshold is exceeded
  • Scaled: Different thresholds for different line items based on their size and volatility

Example thresholds (adjust for your organization):

Line Item SizeDollar ThresholdPercentage Threshold
> $10M$500K5%
$1M - $10M$100K10%
< $1M$50K15%

Variance Decomposition

Break down total variance into component drivers:

  • Volume/quantity effect: Change in volume at prior period rates
  • Rate/price effect: Change in rate/price at current period volume
  • Mix effect: Shift in composition between items with different rates/margins
  • New/discontinued items: Items present in one period but not the other
  • One-time/non-recurring items: Items that are not expected to repeat
  • Timing effect: Items shifting between periods (not a true change in run rate)
  • Currency effect: Impact of FX rate changes on translated results

Investigation and Narrative

For each material variance:

  1. Quantify the variance ($ and %)
  2. Identify whether favorable or unfavorable
  3. Decompose into drivers using the categories above
  4. Provide a narrative explanation of the business reason
  5. Assess whether the variance is temporary or represents a trend change
  6. Note any actions required (further investigation, forecast update, process change)

Source

git clone https://github.com/anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins/blob/main/finance/skills/financial-statements/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Generates income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow statements formatted to GAAP, with period-over-period comparison and variance commentary. It covers standard formats, GAAP presentation requirements, common adjustments, and flux analysis methodology. Notes can disclose items like stock-based compensation and restructuring as applicable.

How This Skill Works

The skill structures statements according to ASC 220 / IAS 1, classifies expenses by function (or by nature when needed), and handles revenue disaggregation per ASC 606. It outputs GAAP-compliant P&L, balance sheet, and cash flow statements with notes and flux analysis to highlight variances.

When to Use It

  • Preparing GAAP-compliant annual or quarterly financial statements for reporting or filings
  • Running flux analysis to identify drivers of period-over-period changes
  • Creating P&L reports with variance commentary for management reviews
  • Producing balance sheets and cash flow statements with proper current/non-current classification
  • Documenting revenue disaggregation under ASC 606 and relevant footnotes

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Gather the source ledger data for income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow
  2. Step 2: Apply GAAP layout (by function or by nature) and prepare period-over-period comparisons
  3. Step 3: Generate outputs with notes, flux analysis, and variance commentary

Best Practices

  • Stick to GAAP presentation: classify expenses by function or by nature consistently
  • Disclose stock-based compensation, depreciation, amortization, and employee benefits in notes as required
  • Separate operating and non-operating items and present income tax expense on its own line
  • Provide clear period-over-period comparisons with reconciliations to GAAP
  • Flag and disclose non-GAAP adjustments with transparent reconciliations

Example Use Cases

  • Software company presenting revenue by product, service, and other categories with SBC notes
  • Manufacturing firm showing COGS and depreciation by function
  • Company performing flux analysis to explain year-over-year gross margin shifts
  • Entity preparing P&L with non-GAAP adjustments clearly labeled and reconciled
  • Entity presenting a GAAP balance sheet with current/non-current classifications and lease right-of-use assets

Frequently Asked Questions

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