1.5 Statement of Cash Flows
1.5 Statement of Cash Flows
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Overview
The primary purpose of the statement of cash flows is to provide relevant information about the cash
receipts and cash payments of an entity during the period.
● To achieve this purpose, the statement should provide information about cash inflows and outflows
from the operating, investing, and financing activities of an entity. This is the accepted order of
presentation.
● The statement of cash flows should help users assess the entity’s ability to generate positive future net
cash flows (liquidity), its ability to meet obligations (solvency), and its financial flexibility. The statement
of cash flows explains the change in cash and cash equivalents during the period. It reconciles the
period’s beginning balance of cash and cash equivalents with the ending balance.
Operating Activities
Operating activities are all transactions and other events that are not financing or investing activities.
● Cash flows from operating activities are primarily derived from the principal revenue-producing
activities of the entity.
● They generally result from transactions and other events that enter into the determination of net
income. The following are examples of cash inflows from operating activities:
● Cash receipts from the sale of goods and services (including collections of accounts receivable)
● Cash receipts from royalties, fees, commissions, trading debt securities, and other revenue
● Cash received in the form of interest or dividends The following are examples of cash outflows from
operating activities:
● Cash payments to government for taxes, duties, fines, and other fees or penalties
Investing Activities
Cash flows from investing activities represent the extent to which expenditures have been made for
resources intended to generate future income and cash flows. The following are examples of cash
outflows (and inflows) from investing activities:
● Cash payments to acquire (cash receipts from sale of) property, plant, and equipment; intangible
assets; and other long-lived assets
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● Cash payments to acquire (cash receipts from sale and maturity of) equity and debt instruments (such
as held-to-maturity securities and available-for-sale debt securities) of other entities for investing
purposes
● Cash advances and loans made to other parties (cash receipts from repayment of advances and loans
made to other parties)
Financing Activities
Cash flows from financing activities generally involve the cash effects of transactions and other events
that relate to the issuance, settlement, or reacquisition of the entity’s debt and equity instruments. The
following are examples of cash inflows from financing activities:
● Cash proceeds from issuing shares and other equity instruments (obtaining resources from owners).
● Cash proceeds from issuing loans, notes, bonds, and other short-term or long-term borrowings. The
following are examples of cash outflows from financing activities:
● Cash payments by a lessee for a reduction of the outstanding liability relating to a finance lease
Information about all noncash investing and financing activities (i.e., investing and financing activities that
affect recognized assets or liabilities but not cash flows) must be disclosed in the notes. The following are
examples of noncash investing and financing activities:
Under the indirect method (also called the reconciliation method), the net cash flow from operating
activities is determined by adjusting the net income of a business for the effect of the following:
● Noncash revenue and expenses that were included in net income, such as depreciation and
amortization expenses, impairment losses, undistributed earnings of equity-method investments, and
amortization of discount and premium on bonds
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● Items included in net income whose cash effects relate to investing or financing cash flows, such as
gains or losses on sales of property and equipment (related to investing activities) and gain or losses on
extinguishment of debt (related to financing activities)
● All deferrals of past operating cash flows, such as changes during the period in inventory and deferred
income
● All accruals of expected future operating cash flows, such as changes during the period in accounts
receivable and accounts payable
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