Solved by verified expert :Case
Analysis

A brief outline of the firm and its
industry is given, as well as a few tips for your attention. You are given
three years’ worth of income statements and balance sheets to examine.

You are a financial analyst
working for an investment firm. This manufacturer has asked for your firm’s
help in raising capital for the upcoming season’s production requirements. It
is your job to analyze the financial statements and comment to the investment
brokers on this firm’s current financial situation. It is late July, and the
firm’s financial statements (representing the fiscal year ending June 30) have
just been released.

For this project you must
recreate the attached financial statements on separate worksheets in an Excel
workbook. Then, on another worksheet, you must create formulas to calculate the
financial ratios that can be derived from the given financial statements. These ratios are to be calculated using
formulas in the cells that are linked to the other worksheets: no credit will
be given if the ratios are calculated by hand and entered into the cells.You
must determine which ratios can be calculated with the information given, based
on the ratios given in your textbook. There is enough data for you to calculate
liquidity, asset management, leverage, and profitability ratios. You must calculate the Du Pont ratio
analysis separately. All three years’ worth of ratios must be calculated,
and should be presented in chronological order for you to do trend analysis.

Next, you must write a
one-page paper discussing the findings of your ratio analysis. You must include
not only the current situation, but also how the ratios have changed over the
past three years (trend analysis). Any recommendations you can make as to what
the firm can do to correct any problem areas would make you look better in the
eyes of your superiors.

Sports,
Inc.

Outdoor Sports, Inc. is a manufacturer of
surfboards, wind surfers, and related equipment. The company was started by two
surfers tinkering in their garage with surfboards of their own design. The
company has grown rapidly, cashing in on the increasing popularity of wind
surfing.

Outdoor Sports’ business is
highly cyclical. Inventory is built up during the late fall and winter months,
and the majority of sales are booked and delivered to distributors during the
early spring. Competition among the many manufacturers of this easily made
product line is intense. Small manufacturers like Outdoor Sports are under
great pressure from major sports equipment makers, who have substantial
promotional resources at their disposal, as well as complementary products,
countercyclical to the sale of surfing equipment. Brand recognition is an
important selling point in this competitive business, achieved at considerable
expense through sport personality endorsements and other promotional campaigns.

What to expect from Outdoor
Sports’ financials depends on when they are examined during the fiscal year. At
June 30, the company’s fiscal year-end, the financials should look most
favorable. Receivables, inventory, payables, and working capital borrowings
should be at seasonal lows. The firm should be cash rich, as it is about to
gear up for the next season’s production run. Property, plant and equipment
should be at some significant level commensurate with the company’s
manufacturing demands, supported by equity and long-term debt.

Sales margins bear close
watching. Pricing pressures caused by intense competition can erode them to
dangerously low levels. Given the seasonality of the business, there may be a
cash flow crunch during the winter months. Overall, cash flow may be a problem
if the business is still growing rapidly, and requires outside financial
resources to do so.

The potential of
overproducing during the winter period for a spring sales period that fails to
live up to management’s expectations is also a significant risk.

OUTDOOR SPORTS, INC.

Balance Sheet ($000s)

June 30, 2011

2009

2010

2011

ASSETS

Current
Assets

Cash

182

25

30

Accounts
Receivable

338

391

349

Inventory

283

831

1,207

Prepaid
Expenses

63

33

11

Other
Current Assets

11

8

3

Total
Current Assets

877

1,287

1,601

Propert,
Plant & Equipment

Land,
Buildings & Equipment

842

842

941

Less
Accumulated Depreciation

179

226

286

Net
land, Buildings & Equipment

663

616

655

Total
Assets

$
1,540

$
1,903

$
2,255

LIABILITIES

Accounts
Payable, Trade

129

283

347

Accounts
Payable, Other

80

52

61

Accrued
Expenses

0

0

0

Short-Term
Debt

184

413

745

Income
Tax Payable

61

0

0

Total
Current Liabilities

454

748

1,152

Long-Term
Debt

578

682

869

Total
Liabilities

1,031

1,430

2,021

Stockholders’
Equity

Capital
Stock

275

275

275

Retained
Earnings

234

198

(41)

Total
Stockholders’ Equity

509

473

234

Total
Liabilities and Equity

$
1,540

$
1,903

$
2,255

Outdoor Sports, Inc.

Income
Statement ($000s)

June 30, 2011

2009

2010

2011

Sales

2,519

4,914

6,185

Cost
of Goods Sold

1,460

2,899

4,172

Gross
Income

1,059

2,016

2,013

Operating
Expenses

732

1,898

2,060

Depreciation
Expense

30

47

61

Operating
Income (EBIT)

297

72

(107)

Interest
Expense

72

107

132

Income
Tax Expense

90

0

0

Other
Expense

47

0

0

Net
Income

$
89

$
(36)

$
(239)