How to Read Financial Statements

  • Lessons

    22

  • Duration

    4 Hours

Instructors

Kirby Rosplock

Kirby Rosplock (Ph.D.)

Born into a very successful enterprising family, Kirby learned family wealth basics the way most affluent offspring do (or don’t) Read More

About Course

How to Read Financial Statements introduces the accounting systems, records, and financial statements that help individuals, owners, beneficiaries, and stakeholders understand the financial health of a business or enterprise. Learners explore accounting methods, the accounting cycle, ledgers, accounts, debits and credits, and the three core financial statements: the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement. Read More

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Overview

  • Learning Objectives

    2 Minutes

Introduction to Accounting - Overview

  • Introduction to Accounting Systems

    3 Minutes
  • Basis of Accounting

    3 Minutes
  • The 5 Step Accounting Cycle

    8 Minutes
  • The Role of Ledgers in Accounting and Financial Statements

    5 Minutes
  • Understanding Accounts, Debits, and Credits

    12 Minutes
  • Homework I - The Importance of Balance in Financial Statements

    30 Minutes

Understanding Financial Statements: An Overview

  • Introduction to Financial Statements

    5 Minutes
  • Income Statement (P&L)

    4 Minutes
  • Understanding the Income Statement

    14 Minutes
  • Balance Sheet

    5 Minutes
  • Understanding the Balance Sheet

    5 Minutes
  • Cash Flow Statement

    10 Minutes
  • Cash Flow Statement Example

    10 Minutes
  • Telling the Full Financial Story with Financial Statements

    10 Minutes

Financial Statement Analysis

  • Techniques and Measurements

    12 Minutes
  • Liquidity and Leverage Ratios

    30 Minutes
  • Homework II - Balance Sheet Analysis

    35 Minutes
  • Profitability Ratios

    5 Minutes
  • Putting Ratios Into Practice

    10 Minutes
  • Homework III - Ratio Analysis

    30 Minutes

Conclusion

  • Wrap Up

    30 Seconds

Test Your Knowledge

  • Quiz Locked

How can I read financial statements well enough to ask better questions and make more informed decisions?

How to Read Financial Statements (formerly Personal Finance Module 2) introduces the accounting systems, records, and financial statements that help individuals, owners, beneficiaries, and stakeholders understand the financial health of a business or enterprise. Learners explore accounting methods, the accounting cycle, ledgers, accounts, debits and credits, and the three core financial statements: the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement. The emphasis is not on memorizing formulas, but on building judgment: what changed, why it changed, whether it is sustainable, what risks remain, and what decision should follow.

What You’ll Be Able to Do on the Other Side

  • Distinguish among cash basis, accrual basis, and tax basis accounting so that you can better understand when income and expenses are being recognized and why reported performance may differ from cash reality.
  • Identify how transactions move through journals, ledgers, trial balances, and financial statements so that you can evaluate the reliability of financial reports and ask informed questions about how numbers were produced.
  • Interpret income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow statements so that you can separate profitability, financial position, and cash movement when evaluating a business or investment.
  • Use basic financial analysis techniques and ratios so that you can assess liquidity, leverage, profitability, operating performance, and shareholder return with more confidence.
  • Read financial statements together so that you can recognize when headline results, such as net income or cash balance, may not tell the full story about sustainability, distribution capacity, or long-term stewardship.

The Experience

This module combines self-paced reading, accounting examples, financial statement walkthroughs, ratio analysis, case studies, and applied homework. Learners begin with the mechanics of accounting, including accounting systems, the five-step accounting cycle, ledgers, accounts, debits, credits, and double-entry bookkeeping.

The experience then moves into practical interpretation of financial statements. Learners review income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow statements, analyze examples through a variety of case studies, and use horizontal analysis, vertical analysis, liquidity ratios, leverage ratios, profitability ratios, and normalized return metrics. 

Estimated Completion Time: 1.5 hours

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    Customers Review

    4.5 out of 5

    4 customer ratings

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    Kelly Ratner M.
    Feb 24, 2026
    It's just a lot of content! Brings me back to accounting 101. Not my favorite subject.
    Danny T.
    Feb 21, 2026
    The material was informative and very practical in use.
    Rebecca K.
    Jan 10, 2024
    The toughest (course) so far but fantastic. Appreciate the assignments to dig into these financial statements.
    Daniel B.
    Mar 21, 2022
    Content is Great still not comfortable with the Ratios Types and what they measure...