Financial Statements Cheat Sheet: The Three Statements Every Investor Must Know
The Three Statements at a Glance
| Statement | What It Shows | Time Frame | Key Question It Answers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Balance Sheet | Assets, liabilities, and equity | Snapshot (single date) | What does the company own and owe right now? |
| Income Statement | Revenue, expenses, and profit | Period (quarter or year) | How much did the company earn over this period? |
| Cash Flow Statement | Cash inflows and outflows | Period (quarter or year) | Where did cash come from and where did it go? |
How the Statements Connect
The three statements are linked. Net income from the income statement flows into retained earnings on the balance sheet and is the starting point of the cash flow statement. Capital expenditures on the cash flow statement increase assets on the balance sheet. Debt issuance shows up in financing activities and on the balance sheet as a liability.
Understanding these linkages is fundamental to fundamental analysis and financial modeling.
Balance Sheet Overview
| Section | Key Line Items | What to Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Current Assets | Cash, receivables, inventory | Current ratio, working capital trend |
| Non-Current Assets | PP&E, goodwill, intangibles | Goodwill as % of assets (acquisition-heavy companies) |
| Current Liabilities | Payables, short-term debt, deferred revenue | Short-term debt maturities, working capital pressure |
| Non-Current Liabilities | Long-term debt, deferred taxes, pensions | Debt maturity schedule, leverage ratios |
| Shareholders’ Equity | Common stock, retained earnings, AOCI | Book value per share, ROE denominator |
Income Statement Overview
| Line Item | Formula / Description | Key Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | Total sales of goods/services | Year-over-year growth rate |
| Gross Profit | Revenue − COGS | Gross margin |
| Operating Income | Gross Profit − SG&A − R&D | Operating margin |
| EBITDA | Operating Income + D&A | EBITDA margin, EV/EBITDA |
| Net Income | After interest, taxes, and one-time items | Net margin, EPS |
Cash Flow Statement Overview
| Section | What It Covers | Key Items |
|---|---|---|
| Operating Activities (CFO) | Cash from core business operations | Net income, D&A add-back, working capital changes |
| Investing Activities (CFI) | Cash spent on / received from investments | Capex, acquisitions, asset sales |
| Financing Activities (CFF) | Cash from debt and equity transactions | Debt issuance/repayment, buybacks, dividends |
Income Statement vs. Cash Flow Statement
| Feature | Income Statement | Cash Flow Statement |
|---|---|---|
| Basis | Accrual accounting | Cash accounting |
| Revenue recognition | When earned (even if not collected) | When cash is received |
| Includes non-cash items? | Yes (depreciation, SBC) | Adds non-cash items back |
| More susceptible to manipulation? | Yes — accounting estimates drive many line items | Less — cash is harder to fake |
| Best for | Profitability analysis | Liquidity and cash generation analysis |
Key Takeaways
- The balance sheet is a snapshot (what the company owns and owes). The income and cash flow statements cover a period.
- Net income flows from the income statement into retained earnings (balance sheet) and starts the cash flow statement.
- Free cash flow = operating cash flow minus capex — it’s the cash available to shareholders and debt holders.
- Compare net income to operating cash flow to gauge earnings quality.
- Use the sub-pages for detailed breakdowns of each statement’s structure and line items.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which financial statement is the most important?
It depends on the analysis. For credit analysis, the cash flow statement matters most. For valuation, the income statement drives earnings multiples. For assessing financial health, the balance sheet is essential. Most analysts prioritize cash flow because cash is harder to manipulate.
What is the difference between GAAP and non-GAAP financials?
GAAP follows standardized accounting rules. Non-GAAP adjustments strip out items like stock-based compensation, restructuring charges, or amortization of intangibles. Non-GAAP can be useful but also hides real costs — always check what’s being excluded.
Where do I find a company’s financial statements?
Public companies file them with the SEC. The annual report is the 10-K, quarterly reports are the 10-Q. Access them via the SEC’s EDGAR database, the company’s investor relations page, or financial data providers.
How often are financial statements published?
Public US companies report quarterly (10-Q) and annually (10-K). The annual report is audited by an independent accounting firm; quarterly reports are reviewed but not fully audited.
What should I look at first when reading financial statements?
Start with revenue growth and free cash flow trends. Then check the balance sheet for debt levels and working capital. Finally, compare net income to cash flow to spot any quality issues. This 5-minute framework catches most red flags.