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Cash Flow Statement

Definition: A cash flow statement is a financial statement that tracks all cash inflows and outflows over a specific period. It’s organized into three sections — operating, investing, and financing activities — and shows how a company generates and spends actual cash, regardless of what the income statement reports.

The cash flow statement completes the trio of core financial statements, alongside the income statement and balance sheet. While the income statement uses accrual accounting (recognizing revenue when earned, not when collected), the cash flow statement strips all that away and answers one question: where did the cash actually go?

This is why experienced analysts often trust cash flow more than reported earnings. Revenue can be booked aggressively, expenses can be capitalized, but cash is binary — it’s either in the bank or it isn’t.

The Three Sections

SectionWhat It CoversKey Items
Operating Activities (CFO)Cash from core business operationsNet income, depreciation & amortization add-backs, changes in working capital
Investing Activities (CFI)Cash spent on or received from long-term assetsCapital expenditures, acquisitions, asset sales, investment purchases/sales
Financing Activities (CFF)Cash from or to capital providersDebt issuance/repayment, dividends paid, share buybacks, equity issuance
Net Change in Cash Cash from Operations + Cash from Investing + Cash from Financing = Net Change in Cash

Add that net change to the beginning cash balance, and you get the ending cash balance — which should match what appears on the balance sheet.

Cash from Operations — The Most Important Section

Operating cash flow (CFO) is where analysts spend the most time. It starts with net income from the income statement, then makes adjustments:

Add back non-cash charges. Depreciation and amortization reduce reported income but don’t consume cash, so they get added back. Stock-based compensation is another common add-back.

Adjust for working capital changes. If accounts receivable increased, the company booked revenue it hasn’t collected yet — that’s a cash drain. If accounts payable increased, the company is holding onto cash longer — that’s a cash source.

Why This Matters
A company can report strong net income while burning cash if its receivables are ballooning or it’s stuffing inventory. The operating section of the cash flow statement exposes this mismatch. When net income is consistently higher than operating cash flow, that’s a red flag worth investigating.

Free Cash Flow — The Metric Analysts Really Want

Free cash flow (FCF) isn’t a line item on the cash flow statement itself, but it’s derived directly from it:

Free Cash Flow FCF = Operating Cash Flow – Capital Expenditures

FCF represents the cash available to pay dividends, repay debt, fund buybacks, or reinvest in the business. It’s one of the most important numbers in fundamental analysis and a core input for enterprise value-based valuation models.

How to Read a Cash Flow Statement

Healthy pattern. The ideal profile is strong positive operating cash flow, moderate negative investing cash flow (the company is reinvesting), and flexible financing activity. This means the business funds itself from operations rather than relying on debt or equity issuance.

Warning signs. Negative operating cash flow combined with heavy borrowing in the financing section means the company is funding operations with debt — an unsustainable pattern. Similarly, if a company frequently issues new shares to fund operations, existing shareholders are getting diluted.

Growth vs. maturity. High-growth companies (think early-stage tech) often show negative operating and investing cash flow because they’re spending aggressively to scale. Mature companies should show strong, consistent operating cash flow with modest capex needs.

Cash Flow Statement vs. Income Statement

FeatureCash Flow StatementIncome Statement
Accounting basisCash basisAccrual basis
Includes non-cash items?No — removes themYes (depreciation, stock comp, etc.)
ShowsWhere cash came from and where it wentRevenue, expenses, and profit
Harder to manipulate?Yes — cash is harder to fabricateMore room for accounting judgment
Key metricFree cash flowNet income / EPS
Common Misconception
Capital expenditures appear in the investing section, not the operating section. This means operating cash flow can look strong even if the company is spending heavily on capex. Always deduct capex to arrive at free cash flow for a truer picture of cash available to shareholders.

Real-World Example

Amazon is a textbook case. For years, the company reported thin (or negative) net income on its income statement, which made it look barely profitable. But its cash flow statement told a different story — strong operating cash flow driven by massive depreciation add-backs, negative working capital (customers pay before Amazon pays suppliers), and heavy reinvestment via capex. Analysts who focused only on net income missed the picture; those who read the cash flow statement understood the business was a cash-generating machine reinvesting aggressively for growth.

Key Takeaways

  • The cash flow statement has three sections: operating, investing, and financing activities.
  • Operating cash flow is the most scrutinized section — it shows whether core operations generate real cash.
  • Free cash flow (operating cash flow minus capex) is one of the most important metrics in fundamental analysis.
  • Cash flow is harder to manipulate than earnings, making it a more reliable signal of financial health.
  • Always read the cash flow statement alongside the income statement and balance sheet for the full picture.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the cash flow statement important?

It shows whether a company generates enough cash from operations to sustain and grow its business. Profitable companies can still go bankrupt if they run out of cash — the cash flow statement catches what the income statement can miss.

What is the difference between operating cash flow and free cash flow?

Operating cash flow is the cash generated by core business activities. Free cash flow subtracts capital expenditures from that figure, showing what’s truly left over for shareholders, debt repayment, or reinvestment.

Why is depreciation added back in the cash flow statement?

Depreciation is a non-cash expense — it reduces net income on the income statement but no cash leaves the company. The cash flow statement starts with net income and adds depreciation back to reflect the actual cash position.

Can a profitable company have negative cash flow?

Yes. This can happen when a company has rapid revenue growth with slow collections (receivables piling up), heavy capex spending, or aggressive inventory buildup. Profitability on paper doesn’t guarantee cash in the bank.

What does negative investing cash flow mean?

It typically means the company is spending on long-term assets — purchasing equipment, acquiring businesses, or making investments. For growing companies, negative investing cash flow is usually a healthy sign that they’re reinvesting in the business.