About this item
Highlights
- Learn how to read, understand, analyze, and interpret different types of financial reports In the newly revised and updated 10th Edition of How to Read a Financial Report, seasoned accounting, financial, and business consultant Tage C. Tracy guides readers through reading, understanding, analyzing, and interpreting various types of financial reports, including cash flow, financial condition, and profit performance reports.
- About the Author: Over the past 30+ years, Tage C. Tracy has operated a financial consulting firm focused on offering CFO/executive-level support and planning services to private companies on a fractional basis, working primarily with startups, rapid growth companies, strategic exits and acquisitions, and turnarounds and challenged environments.
- 272 Pages
- Business + Money Management, Finance
Description
About the Book
"Lurking somewhere amidst all the figures in a financial report is vitally important information about where a company has been and where it is headed. But without a guide to isolate and interpret those numbers, the dizzying array of columns and rows doesn't add up to anything. That's why thousands of professionals and savvy individuals have referred to this bestselling resource that shows anyone how to make sense of the numbers"--Book Synopsis
Learn how to read, understand, analyze, and interpret different types of financial reports
In the newly revised and updated 10th Edition of How to Read a Financial Report, seasoned accounting, financial, and business consultant Tage C. Tracy guides readers through reading, understanding, analyzing, and interpreting various types of financial reports, including cash flow, financial condition, and profit performance reports. This book also reveals the various connections between different financial metrics, reports, and statements, discusses changes in accounting and finance reporting rules, current practices, and recent trends, and explains how financial information can be manipulated, such as through inclusion or omission of certain KPIs.
This bestselling guide uses jargon-simplified and easy-to-understand language to make the information accessible to all, regardless of finance or accounting background. Updates to the 10th Edition include:
- Relevant terminology and issues critical to understand in today's economic environment.
- New material on loans, debt, and using financial reports and statements to understand performance.
- The connection of capital including debt and equity to the income statements and cash flow statements.
- Expanded financial analysis tools and ratios that provide a deeper understanding of a company's financial performance and strength.
- A more in-depth overview of how company's may engineer financial results and how understanding cash flows can help root out fraud.
An essential all-in-one guide on the art of reading a financial report and avoiding common pitfalls and misconceptions, How to Read a Financial Report earns a well deserved spot on the bookshelves of all business leaders and investors who want to be able to read and understand financial reports and statements like a professional.
From the Back Cover
THE NEWEST EDITION OF THE MOST ACCESSIBLE GUIDE TO READING AND UNDERSTANDING FINANCIAL REPORTS
In the newly revised and updated 10th Edition of How to Read a Financial Report, and in keeping with the legacy established by his father, the late professor emeritus John "TOP" Tracy, veteran financial consultant Tage C. Tracy teaches readers how to comprehend, analyze, and interpret financial reports, using easy-to-understand and jargon-free language to make the information accessible to all. Hands-on tools, highly relevant exhibits, and end-of-chapter real-world guidance are included to assist readers in understanding and integrating concepts. This book offers a wide range of invaluable new material but never loses its primary objective of educating readers on the critical concepts of understanding cash flows and the connectivity of the big three financial statements, the balance sheet, the income statement, and the statement of cash flows.
Along with presenting foundational aspects of financial reports and how they differ from financial statements, this book explores the various meaningful connections between different financial metrics, reports, and statements, such as how loans, interest expense, and accrued liabilities are connected to the income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows. The book concludes with key insight on how financial information can be used to tell a story, focusing on different KPIs that can be presented or omitted, as well as ways in which financial data can be manipulated, and used to detect fraud.
Completely thorough in its coverage and accessible regardless of finance or accounting background, How to Read a Financial Report is an essential reference for a wide range of parties seeking to better understand basic financial information or learn how financial information can be packaged by Wall Street to persuade external parties.
About the Author
Over the past 30+ years, Tage C. Tracy has operated a financial consulting firm focused on offering CFO/executive-level support and planning services to private companies on a fractional basis, working primarily with startups, rapid growth companies, strategic exits and acquisitions, and turnarounds and challenged environments.