Course Content
Section 2: Financial Accounting and the Accounting Cycle
Understand the full accounting cycle from transaction to financial report, including adjusting entries that make your figures accurate under accrual accounting.
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Section 4: Financial Ratio Analysis
Use financial ratios to analyse profitability, liquidity, efficiency, and solvency — and make smarter business and investment decisions.
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Section 6: Equity and Debt Financing
Understand how companies raise long-term capital through bonds and equity, and how these instruments are accounted for on the balance sheet.
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Section 7: Managerial Accounting and Business Decisions
Apply accounting to real management decisions: break-even analysis, profit improvement strategies, and evaluating capital investments.
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Section 8: Time Value of Money
Understand present value, future value, and annuities — the mathematical foundation behind loan calculations, investment decisions, and retirement planning.
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Section 9: Cost Accounting — Overheads, ABC, and Standard Costing
Understand how manufacturing and non-manufacturing overheads are allocated, how Activity-Based Costing improves accuracy, and how standard costing drives performance management.
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Complete Accounting & Bookkeeping Masterclass for Beginners

Financial Statements: The Three Reports That Tell a Business’s Story

Three core financial statements together give a complete, interconnected picture of a business’s financial health. No single statement tells the full story — you need all three.

The Three Statements at a Glance

StatementQuestion It AnswersTime Frame
Balance SheetWhat does the business own and owe right now?A single point in time
Income StatementDid the business make a profit this period?Over a period (month/year)
Cash Flow StatementHow did cash actually move in and out?Over a period (month/year)

How the Three Statements Connect

Net income from the income statement flows into retained earnings on the balance sheet. The ending cash balance on the cash flow statement matches cash on the balance sheet. Changes in balance sheet accounts explain the cash flow statement line items. These connections mean an error in one statement often shows up in another — making the three-statement model a powerful self-checking system.

Who Reads Financial Statements?

  • Investors — Assess profitability, growth trajectory, and return on investment.
  • Lenders — Evaluate whether the business can repay loans (focus on liquidity and debt levels).
  • Management — Track performance, identify inefficiencies, and make operational decisions.
  • Tax authorities — Verify that income and expenses are correctly reported.
  • Suppliers — Assess creditworthiness before extending payment terms.

The Notes to Financial Statements

The numbers alone don’t tell everything. The notes (also called footnotes or disclosures) explain accounting policies used, details of significant transactions, contingent liabilities, related-party transactions, and anything else a reader needs to interpret the figures correctly. Always read the notes — that’s where the important context lives.

Lesson Summary

  • Three statements: balance sheet (position), income statement (performance), cash flow statement (liquidity).
  • All three are interconnected — net income links income statement to balance sheet; cash links balance sheet to cash flow statement.
  • Notes to financial statements provide the context needed to interpret the numbers.

The Four Financial Statements — A Complete Overview

StatementAnswers the QuestionTime FrameKey Formula
Income StatementDid we make a profit?A period (month, quarter, year)Revenue − Expenses = Net Income
Balance SheetWhat do we own and owe?A point in time (snapshot)Assets = Liabilities + Equity
Cash Flow StatementWhere did cash come from and go?A periodOperating + Investing + Financing CF
Statement of Retained EarningsHow did equity change?A periodBeg. RE + Net Income − Dividends = End. RE

Why the Order of Preparation Matters

The statements must be prepared in sequence because each one feeds the next:

  1. Income Statement first — calculates Net Income.
  2. Statement of Retained Earnings second — uses Net Income to update RE.
  3. Balance Sheet third — uses ending RE from Step 2 to complete Equity section.
  4. Cash Flow Statement fourth — uses Net Income (indirect method) and balance sheet changes.

If you prepare the balance sheet before the income statement, you won’t know what to put in retained earnings. The sequence isn’t arbitrary — it’s logical dependency.

Snapshot: Riverview Landscaping, Year-End

StatementKey FigureRiverview Result
Income StatementNet Income$42,000
Statement of REEnding Retained Earnings$88,000 → $88,000+$42,000−$10,000 div = $120,000
Balance SheetTotal Assets$280,000 = $160,000 liabilities + $120,000 equity
Cash Flow StatementNet Change in Cash$22,000 (operating +$55,000, investing −$30,000, financing −$3,000)
Bank StatementEnding Cash$47,000 (agrees with balance sheet cash)
✅ The Audit Trail
Every number in financial statements traces back to journal entries, which trace back to source documents. This chain of evidence — from receipt to journal to ledger to financial statement — is what makes accounting auditable and trustworthy.
📥 Practice Worksheet
Financial Statements Practice Worksheet — Download, print, and complete to reinforce this lesson.
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