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Financial Statements: The Tool Every Investor Needs to Know Inside Out
In the world of investing filled with information, sometimes we need to make decisions based on real numbers—actual data—without relying solely on analysis or technical chart trends. This is where financial statements become a tool that many investors overlook, even though they are the most valuable source of information.
Financial statements are summarized documents that companies/organizations prepare to show an overview of their financial position over a period: how much profit or loss they made, how cash flows in and out, and the amount of assets and liabilities.
Why are financial statements important to investors?
Deciding to buy stocks without reviewing financial statements is like driving in the dark without headlights—you might reach your destination, but the risk is quite high.
Assessing the company’s financial health: Financial statements tell you how many assets the company has, how much debt, and what the net assets are. Tracking these trends over 3-5 years helps you see if the company is strengthening or weakening.
Identifying opportunities and risks: If production costs rise but selling prices stay the same, profit margins will be squeezed. If liabilities grow faster than assets, that’s a warning sign.
Planning funding strategies: Banks and investors look at financial statements. If you want to borrow money or attract investment, your financial statements are your credit report.
What are the components of financial statements?
There are 3 main parts that investors need to understand:
1. Income Statement( (Profit and Loss Statement)
This shows “Revenue - Expenses = Net Profit” in a professional format.
Components:
Ask 3 key questions:
) 2. Balance Sheet### (Statement of Financial Position)
This is a “snapshot” of the company’s resources and liabilities at a specific date (usually year-end)
Basic equation: Assets = Liabilities + Shareholders’ Equity
Main components:
Ask 3 questions:
( 3. Cash Flow Statement) (Statement of Cash Flows)
Cash is the blood of the company. Checks and cash flow don’t help if the company’s cash position isn’t healthy.
This statement shows where the company’s cash has come from and gone to.
Divided into 3 sections:
Ask 3 questions:
Pros and cons of reading financial statements
) Advantages
Factual data: Numbers in financial statements are verified (for listed companies), making them more reliable than rumors or hearsay.
Comparability: Investors can compare with competitors or industry averages to see who performs best.
Long-term planning: Looking at 3-5 year trends helps you see the company’s direction.
Key metrics: You can calculate ROE, Debt-to-Equity, Current Ratio, etc. All useful.
Disadvantages
Historical data: Financial statements are usually 3-4 months behind the fiscal year-end. Markets change fast, and new events may occur.
Manipulation possible: Some companies use accounting tricks to make numbers look better (legally, but still deceptive)
Requires understanding: Not everyone can interpret numbers easily; basic accounting knowledge is needed.
Numbers ≠ future value: A company may have good financials now, but market conditions can change.
Other important parts to know
Changes in Equity( (Statement of Changes in Equity)
This records how shareholders’ equity changes over the year and why.
Events that change equity:
( Comprehensive Income) (Statement of Comprehensive Income)
Includes:
The key is to see whether core business is truly profitable or if profits come from extraordinary events.
( Non-profit financial statements) (NGO/Associations)
These have different formats:
How to find and read US stock financial statements
Where to find them?
Company websites: Investor Relations sections often have 10-K (annual reports) and 10-Q ###quarterly reports(
SEC website: )sec.gov### — official source for US-listed companies
Financial data platforms: Investing.com, Yahoo Finance, Google Finance, Bloomberg — all display financials and charts
Bank/broker databases: Some offer research and analysis tools
( Where to look when reading financial statements?
Sample questions to ask
Investing in US stocks after analyzing financial statements
Besides direct stock purchases, investors can consider CFD )Contract for Difference( trading.
Advantages of CFDs:
Comparison: CFD vs. traditional stocks
Caution: Leverage amplifies both gains and losses. Use it wisely.
Summary
Financial statements are not boring documents—they are the “health cards” of a company, telling you:
Skilled investors are not just good at reading charts but deeply understand the numbers.
By learning to read and analyze financial statements correctly, and using appropriate investment tools (whether traditional stocks or CFDs), you will have enough information to plan reasonable investments and increase your chances of success in the market.