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Principles of Finance: Unit 3, Cash Flow From Operations 2 Views
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Description:
Let's take a look at Mattel's cash flow from operating activities and see what's what. We'll warn you - it's accrual, cruel world.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance ah la shmoop cash flow from operations
- 00:05
All right let's do this thing Mattel Here are the
- 00:08
filings were looking at the june thirty two thousand sixteen
- 00:10
cash flows from operations line and we note that company
- 00:13
at a loss of net income of about ninety two
Full Transcript
- 00:15
million dollars Ouch Things not going so well there with
- 00:19
barbie Well but that's it counting on an accrual basis
- 00:23
And of course we have an opus eleven hour video
- 00:26
explaining the deets of accrual accounting Check out all of
- 00:29
it if you will have no life Okay so we're
- 00:31
looking at mattel from a cash flow perspective and maybe
- 00:35
from that perspective or bases or foundation will find that
- 00:39
mattel is more like cap cities a hidden gem producing
- 00:44
actual tons of free cash All right so the next
- 00:47
line is depreciation They'd appreciate a hundred nineteen million dollars
- 00:50
in the six month period there And don't get confused
- 00:53
when some companies produce these lines quarterly It seems like
- 00:56
a lot Annualized That'd be almost a quarter billion dollars
- 00:59
a year of depreciation Was the plastic stamping factory getting
- 01:03
old Well maybe it was That license is paid to
- 01:06
Miley or kanye or boomer for their doll lookalikes may
- 01:10
be the key difference remember between amortization and depreciation is
- 01:14
that amortization is used for intangible assets like licenses and
- 01:18
patents while depreciation is used for tangible ones Was it
- 01:22
the book value of the brands they acquired years ago
- 01:26
And that now aren't worth much Well No If that
- 01:28
were the case it would go in the financing section
- 01:31
lower sea they're tricky but note that the depreciation line
- 01:35
is positive The net income loss of ninety two million
- 01:38
dollars was negative See the parentheses there around it Well
- 01:42
why is depreciation positive here Well because we're trying to
- 01:45
calculate cash earnings from operations in a cruel accounting you
- 01:50
take into account depreciation but in cash accounting wealth appreciation
- 01:54
is kind of phantom so since we subtracted it from
- 01:57
the cruel world to get r ninety two million dollars
- 02:00
in net income losses you have to add it back
- 02:03
now in the cash accounting part that we're doing confusing
- 02:06
Yes well hang in there we're confused to next line
- 02:08
is amortization and just like depreciation we're gonna add back
- 02:11
almost thirteen million bucks over that six month period just
- 02:15
a za total sidebar here and not for anything other
- 02:17
than your prurient pleasure Note that our accounting loss of
- 02:20
ninety two million bucks is fully negated by are just
- 02:23
adding back dna here that is we have negative ninety
- 02:26
two plus hundred nineteen plus their teen equals forty and
- 02:29
that's forty million dollars of cash flow production Well why
- 02:32
does that matter Well lot of wall street people quote
- 02:34
earnings results as one form or another of ebitda earnings
- 02:38
before interest taxes depreciation and amortization Just worth noting so
- 02:41
noted Move on deferred income taxes air Next we owe
- 02:45
taxes We differed paying them They consumed sixty million dollars
- 02:49
of cash in the six month period Likely meaning that
- 02:52
we had a debt obligation of taxes which we had
- 02:54
to pay off in this period And that consumed cash
- 02:58
Alright next is share based compensation Okay We paid our
- 03:01
top execs with stock and options Why Well we want
- 03:05
them to behave as owner managers rather than just employees
- 03:09
If they own a chunk of the company hopefully they'll
- 03:12
act in the long term Best interest of the company
- 03:14
as owners not just people taking a paycheck and running
- 03:18
So we pay them with cash and stock but stock
- 03:20
isn't free It has to be accounted for on an
- 03:23
accrual basis Stock is usually evaluated at some average price
- 03:27
for where the shares were trading around when they were
- 03:29
granted There's long formula for all this that's totally not
- 03:33
worth covering in this course so we'll just move on
- 03:35
from it is paying in stock the same his cash
- 03:37
No So you have to add back the value of
- 03:40
that stock compensation by adding back the cash amount that
- 03:44
was notionally deducted on an accrual basis for paying for
- 03:47
it all right Next up onto net change in assets
- 03:51
and liabilities Ooh this is a complex one Well let's
- 03:54
start with the super basic concept Recall the deal with
- 03:57
the super bowl and our friendly little lemonade stand a
- 03:59
while ago Our balance sheet change dramatically after we got
- 04:03
paid by the nfl for providing lemonade for the super
- 04:06
bowl Right We had a mountain of cash come in
- 04:09
courtesy of the kindly loving people of the nfl and
- 04:12
we paid off our debts Grandma in the cup vendor
- 04:15
in the five k visa card and costco over sugar
- 04:18
And lemons and all that Well this event generated a
- 04:20
ton of cash and a bunch of other things changed
- 04:22
A cz Well the biggest changes was that archy inventory
- 04:25
went down to the well basically nothing And in the
- 04:27
case of the lemonade company inventory zehr generally really cheap
- 04:31
They represent only a small fraction of the cost of
- 04:34
goods sold like fifteen percent or fifteen cents A cop
- 04:37
for you no sugar and lemons on a one dollars
- 04:40
a cup sail but repurposed last it's hello barbie are
- 04:44
very different The plastic expires or melts or gets damaged
- 04:49
in transit And some kids just cry and cry and
- 04:51
cry And mommy takes ken back to the store for
- 04:54
a refund so mattel could be gearing up for a
- 04:56
huge new foray into swimming plastic doll with a big
- 05:00
michael phelps campaign He floats along with hope and they
- 05:04
spend a hundred million dollars in cash producing ten million
- 05:07
michael phelps stalls ready to sell them at twenty bucks
- 05:09
a pop this summer Well that event of stocking up
- 05:11
in inventory consumed a ton of cash It was a
- 05:14
negative to cash production even though you now have this
- 05:17
Little army of bendable michael's which by the way you
- 05:20
plan to sell it double the price for which you
- 05:23
produce them You hope they sell anyway but during that
- 05:25
period of stocking up it was really bad for your
- 05:28
cash flow But what if you didn't have to Hey
- 05:31
your plastic vendors right away And what if the little
- 05:34
impede on the doll could wait to be paid for
- 05:37
five months Well you promised to pay whether the dolls
- 05:41
sell or not You owe the money eventually but in
- 05:44
greenlighting all of that work you've accumulated a huge change
- 05:48
in your accounts payable in this period and you haven't
- 05:52
gotten a diamond cash from selling michael's yet so you
- 05:55
need capital that just works for you for some period
- 05:58
of time until you can monetize michael this summer when
- 06:01
the whether it's hot kids want him to swim alongside
- 06:04
them in the pool before he melts into the deck
- 06:06
and you sell the parents of the crying kid another
- 06:09
doll very high margin hot decks in the summer you're
- 06:11
praying for another scorcher So for starters note the ad
- 06:15
back of three hundred fifty one million dollars in accounts
- 06:17
Receivable here Att mattel That means that mattel collected in
- 06:20
cash two hundred fifty one million dollars in a r
- 06:23
or accounts receivable This would be from places like walmart
- 06:26
amazon target while they're still alive and the other places
- 06:30
mattel sells its wares but it also grew inventory See
- 06:34
the two hundred eighty nine million dollars in cash cost
- 06:36
to build inventories and that's a lot Maybe they really
- 06:39
are doing a michael swimmer doll Finally note the mishmash
- 06:43
of accounts payable accrued liabilities and income tax is payable
- 06:46
all in one line Why would they jam them all
- 06:49
into one line They're well Paper is cheap And computer
- 06:52
server disk space is pretty much free in the cloud
- 06:55
these days So why jam him in Why not break
- 06:57
them out Well the answer is that the numbers were
- 07:00
probably really ugly Look how much was burned in there
- 07:03
in cash Three hundred eleven million dollars We're going to
- 07:07
skip other for now And just look at the bottom
- 07:09
line for cash from operations for mattel Yet they burned
- 07:12
over two hundred forty million dollars for operating company for
- 07:15
six months This is a company in trouble People go
- 07:19
Type in ticker m eighty on a stock quote thing
- 07:22
and you'll get that whole ugly story were it not
- 07:24
for this company paying a huge fat dividend It'd be
- 07:27
a really low price stock And you can only imagine
- 07:29
what had happened if they ever cut their dividend groups
- 07:32
They did later and here's what happened So what we
- 07:35
thought was bad enough with the ninety million dollars accrual
- 07:38
accounting loss when we uncover the cash from operations line
- 07:41
and find a loss of two hundred forty million dollars
- 07:43
it's even worse Ug in the back Your mind however
- 07:46
you should be thinking this is a toy company When
- 07:50
do most toys get sold Oh yeah Christmas that it
- 07:54
be December is december reflected in the january one to
- 07:58
june thirty time frame No So maybe things will be
- 08:02
better in the back half of the year That's not
- 08:04
our mission here We just went through cash flows from
- 08:06
operations which is the first of three parts of cash
- 08:10
flows So before we go let's do a quick review
- 08:12
of the math of accounts receivable in accounts payable Let's
- 08:15
just tweak the superbowl lemonade delivery slightly What if the
- 08:18
nfl had said we'll pay you after you deliver the
- 08:21
hundred thousand cups of lemonade according to the following formula
- 08:25
you get fifty thousand dollars the day after the super
- 08:28
bowl and then you get fifty thousand dollars three months
- 08:30
later because we want to be sure nobody sues us
- 08:33
for lousy lemonade that ruined they're doing all right Well
- 08:36
we of course say yes because well they are the
- 08:38
nfl which stands for no freaking lawyers How would the
- 08:42
numbers then look on our income statement next quarter in
- 08:45
the following quarter Well we'd recognize the cash paid this
- 08:48
quarter but would recognize all a hundred grand of the
- 08:51
revenues like aren't the odds really high The nfl will
- 08:55
hey yes yes but we don't get the revenues for
- 08:57
three months so best practices gap accounting would make a
- 09:00
note of that either we would not recognize the revenues
- 09:03
until next quarter or without a line for deferred revenue
- 09:06
so we're recognizing them light that way once they become
- 09:10
full fledged revenues next quarter fifty grand will evaporate from
- 09:13
our deferred revenues line and our accounts receivable line and
- 09:17
fifty grand will then go into our revenues line while
- 09:20
the same works in the other direction We're going to
- 09:22
throw a bunch of these computations your way as we
- 09:24
work through the course So if you don't get all 00:09:26.523 --> [endTime] this right away don't sweat it Just keep plugging
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