FIN 300 Chapter 3: FIN300 Ross Westerfield Corporate Finance Solutions Chapter 3 (8th Edition).pdf

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15 Apr 2014
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Lo1 the sources and uses of a firm"s cash flows. Lo2 how to standardize financial statements for comparison purposes. Lo3 how to compute and, more importantly, interpret some common ratios. Lo5 some of the problems and pitfalls in financial statement analysis. Answers to concepts review and critical thinking questions (lo2) If inventory is purchased with cash, then there is no change in the current ratio. Thus, if debt is paid off with cash, the current ratio increases if it was initially greater than 1. 0. If pressed by its short-term creditors and suppliers for immediate payment, the firm might have a difficult time meeting its obligations. A current ratio of 1. 50 means the firm has 50% more current assets than it does current liabilities. This probably represents an improvement in liquidity; short-term obligations can generally be met completely with a safety factor built in. Any excess funds sitting in current assets generally earn little or no return.

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