Standards and Financial Statements

Preparing Cash Flows Practically: How to Extract Them from the Balance Sheet and Income Statement? (Step by Step)

Financial reporting: Preparing the Cash Flow Statement (illustration)
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Financial Reporting IAS 7

Preparing Cash Flows Practically: How to Extract Them from the Balance Sheet and Income Statement? (Step by Step)

“Profit is an opinion, Cash is a fact.” A company can show massive profits on paper yet go bankrupt because it ran out of cash to pay salaries. This is why the Statement of Cash Flows is crucial. It ignores accounting accruals and focuses solely on the movement of money. In this guide, we explain how to prepare this statement under IAS 7: What are the three activities (Operating, Investing, Financing)? And how to use the Indirect Method to convert Net Profit into Net Cash.

Illustrative design for cash flow statement showing money flowing through three pipes: Operating, Investing, and Financing.
The Cash Flow Statement reveals the quality of earnings: Is the profit generating real cash?
What will you learn in this guide?
  • Definition of the Statement of Cash Flows and “Cash Equivalents.”
  • Why Net Profit ≠ Net Cash Flow (Understanding Non-cash items).
  • Detailed breakdown of the 3 Activities: Operating, Investing, and Financing.
  • Comparison: Direct Method vs. Indirect Method.
  • Visual model (SVG) explaining the Indirect Method adjustments logic.
  • Interactive Tool: Calculate Operating Cash Flow from Net Income.
  • What is Free Cash Flow (FCF) and why do investors love it?
Prerequisite: To understand the starting point (Net Profit), ensure you are familiar with the Income Statement Preparation.

1) What is the Statement of Cash Flows?

It is a financial statement that summarizes the amount of cash and cash equivalents entering and leaving a company.

Cash Equivalents: Short-term, highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash (e.g., Treasury bills maturing in < 3 months).

2) The Three Pillars (Activities)

IAS 7 requires classifying cash flows into three categories:

Activity Definition Examples (In/Out)
Operating Principal revenue-producing activities. + Cash from Customers
– Payments to Suppliers/Staff
Investing Acquisition/disposal of long-term assets. + Sale of Equipment
– Purchase of Land
Financing Changes in equity and borrowings. + Issuing Shares/Loans
– Paying Dividends

3) Direct vs. Indirect Method

How do we calculate “Cash from Operations”? There are two ways:

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  • Direct Method: Lists major classes of gross cash receipts and payments (e.g., “Cash paid to suppliers”). It is more transparent but harder to prepare.
  • Indirect Method: Starts with Net Profit and adjusts for non-cash items and changes in working capital. This is the most common method used globally.

4) Visual Logic: The Indirect Method

Indirect Method: Profit to Cash Net Profit Add back Non-Cash Items + Depreciation, + Amortization Working Capital Changes – Increase in Asset / + Increase in Liab
We start with Profit and “undo” the accrual accounting effects to find the real cash generated.

5) Practical Example (Indirect Calculation)

Net Income$100,000
+ Depreciation Expense$20,000
– Increase in Receivables($10,000)
+ Increase in Payables$5,000
= Net Cash from Operations$115,000

Note: An increase in assets (Receivables) consumes cash (Negative), while an increase in liabilities (Payables) saves cash (Positive).

6) Interactive Cash Flow Calculator

Estimate your Operating Cash Flow using the Indirect Method:

Operating Cash Flow:
Logic Check:

7) Free Cash Flow (FCF)

Free Cash Flow is the cash left over after paying for operating expenses and capital expenditures (CAPEX).

FCF = Net Cash from Operations – Capital Expenditures (CAPEX).

8) Frequently Asked Questions

Why add back depreciation?

Depreciation is deducted to calculate Net Profit, but it does not involve a cash outflow. Therefore, we add it back to reflect the actual cash position.

Is Interest Paid Operating or Financing?

Under IAS 7, there is flexibility. Interest paid can be classified as either Operating or Financing, provided it is applied consistently.

9) Conclusion

The summary is simple: The Statement of Cash Flows is the truth serum of accounting. While profits can be manipulated by estimates, cash flow is hard fact. By mastering the Indirect Method and understanding the three activity pillars, you can assess the true survival capability and value generation of any business.

Your Next Step: Use the calculator above. If your Net Income is positive but your Operating Cash Flow is negative, investigate your Receivables and Inventory immediately!

© Digital Salla Articles — General educational reference. For professional analysis or audited statements, consult a certified public accountant.