Financing activities tell where a firm has obtained capital in the form of cash to fund the business.
Source of cash for financing: Proceeds from the:
- sale of company shares or
- sale of bonds (long-term debt).
Use of cash for financing: If a company:
- pays off a bond issue,
- pays a dividend, or
- buys back its own stock.
A consistent cash flow from financing activities indicates excessive dependence on credit or equity markets. Typically, this figure oscillates between negative and positive.
A big positive spike reflects a big bond issue or stock sale. In such a case, check to see whether the resulting cash is used:
- for investments in the business (probably okay) or
- to make up for a shortfall in operating cash flow (probably not okay), or,
- if the generated cash flows straight to the cash balance, you should wonder why a company is selling shares or debt just to increase cash, although often the reasons are difficult to know. Perhaps an acquisition?
An illustration:
Company X's statement shows a happy story for investors:
- $15.4 m paid to investors as dividends
- $8.2 m paid out in "Sale Purchase of Stock" (- this is most likely for a share buyback. In fact, the company X actually repurchased $17.2 million in its own stock on the market; then issued $8.9 million in stock, most likely for employee stock options ESOS, and compensation.)
Bottom line: Company X is using surplus cash generated from operations to give something back to shareholders. That's a good thing.
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