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How to Read a Balance Sheet

Though a balance sheet is intended to be a gateway to understanding a company’s financial position, there are lots of places on one for valuable information to hide. Here’s where to look.

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Even though the income statement normally attracts the most attention from investors, the balance sheet is the true starting point for understanding a company’s financial position. It shows how much a business owns (its assets), owes (liabilities), and how much equity is leftover for the owners at a specific point in time. (For more detail, read this primer on the basic elements of a balance sheet.)

To get a feel for how a pro dives into a balance sheet, Inc.com spoke with Tom Robinson, managing director of the education division of the CFA Institute inCharlottesvilleVirginia. The institute created the Chartered Financial Analyst designation held by many stock analysts and portfolio managers.

Reading a Balance Sheet: Liquidity and Solvency

When looking at a balance sheet, two of the most important things you want to get a feel for are a company’s liquidity and solvency, says Robinson. Liquidity is a company’s ability to meet its short-term obligations, such as its working capital needs and its debt obligations. Solvency is a measure of the company’s ability to sustain its activities over a longer period of time.

When assessing a company’s liquidity, one key ratio is a company’s current assets in relation to its current liabilities, or what is known as the current ratio. Current assets include cash, cash equivalents, securities, accounts receivable, inventory, and any other assets that can be converted into cash or used up within the current period. Current liabilities are what a company needs to pay off over the coming year. A good ratio is going to vary from industry to industry, but, in general, a bank would like to see a current ratio of 2 to 1 for a small business, Robinson says. That is, the company should have twice as many current assets as liabilities. The strength of the ratio as a measure of liquidity will also vary greatly by industry; a shipbuilder’s inventory will be a lot less liquid than that of grocery store, Robinson notes.

Because inventory can be a lot more difficult to turn into cash, analysts use another ratio, known as the quick ratio, to measure liquidity. Typically the quick ratio excludes inventory from the numerator, leaving just cash, marketable securities, and receivables to be divided by current liabilities. These are considered the assets most easily turned into cash. However, it should be noted that some companies, those in retail for example, can probably convert their inventory into cash more quickly than others can collect their receivables.

Next up is solvency. Here, an analyst wants to look at the level of total debt relative to the equity used to capitalize a business by its owners. “You want to see some balance,’ says Robinson. “And that balance is going to vary a lot from industry to industry.’ For example, banks do much of their financing with debt, whereas a service company, like an accounting firm, is likely financed mostly with equity.

Dig Deeper: How to Navigate Business Insolvency

Reading a Balance Sheet: Tangible Versus Intangible Assets

In reviewing a balance sheet, you want to think next about what would happen if you were forced to liquidate an asset. By doing so, you’ll need to look at whether a company’s assets are tangible or intangible. Tangible assets are physical in nature and include cash, inventory, buildings, equipment and accounts receivable.

Intangible assets are items like patents and trademarks. These assets often have real value, but you need to carefully examine them to ascertain it. If a company has made many acquisitions, for example, it could have a considerable amount of goodwill listed as an asset, or the amount it paid for a company in excess of the fair value of its net assets. This would be considered an intangible asset, because “if things get bad, I can’t cash in that goodwill,’ Robinson says. Furthermore, there’s alawys the chance that if the deal doesn’t pan out as expected, the company will have to write down the goodwill.

Another spot on the balance sheet to reviewwith a healthy dose of skepticism isother comprehensive income, which is included in shareholders’ equity. This figure reflects income and losses that have been left off the company’s income statement. Foreign currency translations are kept here, for example. Suppose a company is earning revenue in yen, but never actually exchanges that yen for dollars. Any unrealized foreign currency gains or losses will be listed under other comprehensive income. In general, it’s a line item chockfull of money that may never be realized and won’t count for much in the event of a liquidation.

Dig Deeper: See a Balance Sheet Sample in Inc.com’s Free Tool Section

Reading a Balance Sheet: Performing a Common-Size Analysis

As with an income statement, one of the best ways to get a feel for a balance sheet is to break it down into percentages, or to perform a common-size analysis. For an income statement, the best way to do such an analysis is to take all the items on the statement and divide them by revenues. With a balance sheet, there are two ways to perform this analysis.

First, you may conduct a vertical common-size analysis, where, similar to the income statement analysis, you express assets, liabilities, and equity as a percentage of total assets. You want to look at these percentages over a period of about three years to spot changes. If inventory was 10 percent of total assets last year and 12 percent of total assets this year, you now know that inventory grew faster than total assets. You can then investigate why that is so.

Second, you may perform a horizontal common-size analysis. Here, you want to calculate the year-over-year change for each line item of both the balance sheet and the income statement. What you’re looking for is how an item has changed relative to how total assets and revenue have changed. From this, you may be able to see that while revenue grew at a 10 percent clip and assets increased by 5 percent, inventory surged by 15 percent. A careful reader would then wonder why the company is building up inventory when revenue is increasing at a strong pace. “It might be a sign there is poor earnings quality or maybe they’re overstating inventory or building it up too much,’ Robinson says. Either way, the balance sheet is warning you that there is some sort of inefficiency with which you should grapple.

Another area to look at closely is receivables. If they’re increasing faster than revenue, that may be a signal that the company has a problem with collections. In this case, you may worry that the company isn’t increasing its allowance for doubtful accounts at a fast enough pace.

Dig Deeper: How to Understand an Income Statement

Reading a Balance Sheet: Other Key Ratios

The balance sheet can give you a view not just into earnings quality, but how well the company is managing its inventory and receivables. A few important ratios to keep in mind:

  • Inventory turnover = cost of goods sold divided by average inventories
  • Receivables turnover = sales divided by average accounts receivable
  • Total asset turnover = sales divided by average total assets

You’ll want to look at how these ratios change over time, as well as how the company is performing relative to its peers. (Sageworks, Dun & Bradstreet, and theRisk Management Association are a few sources for financial information on small and midsize businesses.)

Dig Deeper: How to Spot Trouble in Your Financials

Reading a Balance Sheet: Points of Confusion

When reading a balance sheet, financial laymen are most often tripped up when revenue or expenses occur at a different time than the cash is received or paid, Robinson says. When this happens, a company faces a deferred asset or liability.

For example, what you pay the IRS in taxes will often differ from the amount of income tax expense you calculate for financial reporting purposes. If the amount you pay the IRS is more than your tax expense on your income statement, you record a deferred tax asset on your company’s balance sheet. If it’s less, you record a liability, because you will have to pay more out at a later date.

These aren’t warning signs as much as timing issues. In fact, a liability could actually be a good thing. In the case of an airline, you typically pay the airline before it delivers any service to you. Until that service has been delivered, the airline will actually record a liability on its balance sheet because it is something it owes.

“If they’ve deferred revenues or even deferred tax liabilities, that’s not a bad thing,” says Robinson. “It means they collected revenue in advance or postponed the payment of taxes by selecting their tax accounting method appropriately.”

Reading a Balance Sheet: Final Thoughts

Though a balance sheet is intended to be a gateway to understanding a company’s financial position, there are many nooks on one for valuable information to hide. Make sure you update your company’s balance sheet on a regular basis, encourage your management team to pore over it for useful information, and review the balance sheets of businesses in which you invest or with which your company forges a strong business partnership. The numbers listed on a balance sheet provide you with data that can help you make smarter decisions. These numbers will also give you a head’s up when trouble is brewing. Don’t be intimidated. Use the tool to make informed management decisions.

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What’s Hot and What’s Not in Content Marketing for 2012

Content marketing is still in its infancy, but some practices already have gained favor and others have faded away. Below are some of the expected trends this year.

Crowdsourcing for Content Creation
Crowdsourcing will be hot in 2012. AOL’s purchase last year of the Huffington Post, which has relied heavily on crowdsourcing for content creation, marked a turning point. Suddenly, it became a valid business model to tap into people’s willingness to create content for free or for low pay in return for online exposure. Now, companies of all sizes are eager to try such crowdsourcing to generate content.

Watch for consumer crowdsourcing on social media to be extremely popular, too. On Facebook, companies will continue to invite followers and consumers to upload photos and videos and tag themselves as friends. Also, we’ll see more contests inviting people to upload images and videos to Facebook, Flickr, YouTubeand other sites, showing them experiencing brands. With crowdsourcing, a company gains brand exposure by leveraging the power and reach of the crowd rather than spending money to create content itself.

Content Curation, Aggregation and Syndication
Content curation also will be hot in 2012, but content aggregation and online syndication are losing some heat. With the release of the Google Panda Farmer algorithm changes last year, the practice of simply aggregating links and republishing content gathered from across the Web lost much of its usefulness to website owners and businesses.

Related: Why Content Is Still King When It Comes to Lead Generation

However, as a door closes, a window opens. In the world of content marketing, that window is content curation. The success of sites like the Daily Beast that find and share the best online content has put content curation in the spotlight. Unlike aggregation and syndication that simply republish links or content, human beings select what they consider the best content in their areas of expertise, share links to the original content and add their own commentary. It’s such added value, along with convenience, that is giving content curation momentum.

Brands as Media
Brands publishing content in a manner similar to media companies will be hot in 2012, but using the social Web for traditional marketing is out.

More companies are beginning to understand that social media sites and tools aren’t the place for their usual marketing pitches. Instead, companies realize they need to think like publishers, not marketers, to connect their brands with online audiences. So this year, informative editorial material, along with sporadic marketing information, will define branded content online. Look for brands to use more video and mobile-friendly content, too, in response to the growing number of smartphones and tablets.

Related: 10 Tips for Better Content Marketing

Content Marketing Integration
Silo marketing is out in 2012, and complete marketing integration is in. There has never been a more pivotal year for companies to take off their blinders and fully mesh all aspects of their marketing–online and offline, traditional and social.

All marketing initiatives in 2012 should feed off one another, surrounding consumers with content and experiences from which they can select how they want to interact with the brand. Whether Facebook contests, mobile campaigns or simply in-store signage, all roads should lead back to a single brand promise and a central online destination, such as a company website or blog.

With marketing integration comes a greater need for performance tracking. Watch for companies of all sizes to leverage social-media management and monitoring tools such as HootSuite, SproutSocial and Radian6.

Bottom line: Content marketing will continue to evolve. Stay focused on the trends described above, and you’ll have a solid foundation to adapt to the inevitable changes.

Related: 10 Ways to Turn Your Blog into a Lead-Generation Machine
Original Post from Entrepreneur.com

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Advertising to 800 Million

For companies or organizations debating the value of purchasing and placing ads on social networking giant Facebook, they may want to take a look at this year’s sales numbers.

According to a recent article from ClickZ, advertising agencies, marketers and research data are all suggesting that Facebook’s ad sales blew everyone else out of the water. Portals such as Yahoo, AOL and MSN are searching for a flotation device, as they are struggling to compete with the lure of the social network’s 800 million users and possible impressions.

Scott Symonds, head of media for digital agency AKQA, said that Facebook’s 2011 ad sales are “definitely a challenge” to the search portals, which are also unable to offer marketers the same type of follow-up that Facebook can in terms of viewing likes/fans and building a community around a brand.

As a result, Symonds noted that the portals are in fact trying to become more like Facebook, promoting sharing and other social activities, the source writes.

“We’ve seen that positive impact in surveys … I think Yahoo, AOL and MSN all have great content,” he explains to ClickZ. “They are all trying to find a way to make their content more sharable so they can compete with Facebook, which has a pretty good advantage right now. The portals are not even disputing that. They are trying to socialize their inventory.”

But Facebook is not sitting happy on its riches. Instead, the company is moving into other arenas of the marketing sphere, announcing plans to test mobile ads as well as couponing spots.

Bloomberg reported this week that Facebook has announced that it will enter the mobile marketing sector by the end of March, prior to its much rumored and anticipated initial public offering.

While the details on what mobile ads from the company would look like, some have floated the notion that Facebook’s Sponsored Stories, which center around consumers’ interactions with brands, would be available on mobile users’ News Feed, the source writes.

Yet Facebook will have a lot of catching up to do in this field, especially against giants such as Google, Apple and Millenial Media. The social network does have some advantages though, according to Bloomberg.

“Facebook’s potential advantage is that by gathering so much information about a person’s interests and associates, it can help advertisers target potential customers more directly than mobile Web browsers or applications,” Bloomberg notes.

However, Facebook has delayed the launch of the mobile advertising service already and a source tells Bloomberg that further delays could still occur.

Mobile ads aren’t the only new marketing device Facebook is testing. The company is currently working with a new ad offering that allows companies to post a coupon on their page, which can then be re-posted by fans.

“Users who see the ad or the page post can click ‘Get Coupon,’” InsideFacebook explains. “This action can be posted to a user’s wall. Users then receive an email from Facebook with the coupon and an option to share it with friends.”

The source notes that the coupons can be used both online or off, depending on the company’s preference, and is currently being tested by a limited number of businesses. As of yet, there is no word on whether or when the service will be available to a wider audience of marketers.

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