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Lecture Note - Chapter 12

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These lecture notes from Chapter 12 of Financial Accounting (11th Edition) by Libby, Libby, and Hodge provide an in-depth overview of the statement of cash flows. They explain how to classify cash flows into operating, investing, and financing activities, and detail how to prepare the operating section using the indirect method. The notes also cover how to interpret key performance metrics such as the quality of income ratio and capital acquisitions ratio. Examples clarify how real cash inflows and outflows are reported, and how supplemental disclosures provide context. This chapter emphasizes how cash flow analysis supports financial decision-making.

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Uploaded on
April 9, 2025
Number of pages
6
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Irina luneva
Contains
Chapter 12

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Lecture Notes: Chapter 12 – Statement of
Cash Flows
Based on Financial Accounting, 11th Edition by Libby, Libby, and Hodge




1. Introduction
The statement of cash flows provides critical information about a company's ability to generate
cash, meet financial obligations, and fund operations and investments. Unlike the income
statement, which is based on accrual accounting, the cash flow statement focuses strictly on
actual cash transactions. This chapter explores how to classify cash flows, prepare the statement
using the indirect method, and analyze key financial ratios like the quality of income and capital
acquisitions ratios.




2. Cash Flow Categories: Operating, Investing, Financing
The statement of cash flows is divided into three sections:

2.1 Operating Activities

These involve the core business activities—producing, selling, and delivering products and
services.

Examples:

 Cash received from customers
 Cash paid to suppliers and employees
 Interest paid
 Income taxes paid

2.2 Investing Activities

These include transactions related to long-term assets.

Examples:

 Buying or selling property, plant, and equipment (PP&E)

,  Buying or selling investments
 Loans made to others or collections from loans

2.3 Financing Activities

These involve changes in a company's equity and borrowings.

Examples:

 Issuing stock or bonds
 Repaying principal on loans
 Paying dividends
 Repurchasing stock




3. The Indirect Method for Operating Activities
The indirect method is the most commonly used approach for preparing the operating section of
the cash flow statement.

3.1 Starting Point: Net Income

Begin with net income from the income statement.

3.2 Adjust for Non-Cash Items:

 Depreciation/Amortization → Add back
 Gains on Asset Sales → Subtract
 Losses on Asset Sales → Add back

3.3 Adjust for Changes in Working Capital:

 Increase in current assets → Subtract
 Decrease in current assets → Add
 Increase in current liabilities → Add
 Decrease in current liabilities → Subtract

Example:

 Net income: $120,000
 Depreciation: $15,000
 Increase in Accounts Receivable: $10,000
 Increase in Accounts Payable: $8,000
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