The cash flow statement reports the cash inflows and outflows of a business over a specific period. It is one of the three primary financial statements, alongside the income statement and the balance sheet , and is required for most UK companies under FRS 102.

Section 1: Why the Cash Flow Statement Matters

1.1 Profit Does Not Equal Cash

A business can report a healthy profit on its income statement while simultaneously running out of cash. This happens because accrual accounting records revenue when earned and expenses when incurred, regardless of when cash actually changes hands.

For example, a company might recognise £500,000 in revenue but only have collected £350,000 from customers, with £150,000 still outstanding as receivables. The cash flow statement bridges this gap by showing the actual cash position.

1.2 Assessing Liquidity

The cash flow statement reveals whether a business can:

  • Pay its suppliers and employees on time
  • Service its debt obligations
  • Fund capital expenditure from operations
  • Pay dividends to shareholders
  • Survive without additional financing

1.3 Stakeholder Decisions

Lenders use the cash flow statement to assess whether a borrower can service debt. Investors use it to evaluate whether profits translate into real cash. Directors use it for working capital management and cash planning.

Section 2: Structure of the Cash Flow Statement

The cash flow statement is divided into three sections, each representing a different type of activity:

2.1 Cash Flows from Operating Activities

This section shows cash generated or consumed by the core business operations. It is generally the most important section because a sustainable business must generate positive operating cash flow.

Key items include:

  • Cash received from customers
  • Cash paid to suppliers and employees
  • Interest paid
  • Tax paid
  • VAT payments or refunds

2.2 Cash Flows from Investing Activities

This section covers cash spent on acquiring or received from disposing of long-term assets:

  • Purchase of property, plant and equipment
  • Sale of fixed assets
  • Purchase of intangible assets
  • Acquisition of subsidiary companies
  • Proceeds from sale of investments

Capital expenditure on assets subject to depreciation and amortisation appears here.

2.3 Cash Flows from Financing Activities

This section shows how the business raises and repays finance:

  • Proceeds from issuing shares
  • Proceeds from new bank loans or bonds
  • Repayment of borrowings
  • Payment of dividends
  • Repayment of lease liabilities

Section 3: The Indirect Method

The indirect method is the most commonly used approach in UK financial reporting. It starts with profit before tax from the income statement and adjusts for non-cash items and changes in working capital to arrive at cash generated from operations.

3.1 Example Using the Indirect Method

Item£
Profit before tax120,000
Adjustments for:
Depreciation25,000
Amortisation8,000
Loss on disposal of fixed assets3,000
Interest expense10,000
Changes in working capital:
Increase in trade receivables(15,000)
Decrease in inventory5,000
Increase in trade payables8,000
Cash generated from operations164,000
Interest paid(10,000)
Corporation tax paid(25,000)
Net cash from operating activities129,000

3.2 Understanding the Adjustments

  • Depreciation and amortisation are added back because they are non-cash charges that reduced profit but did not involve any cash outflow
  • Loss on disposal is added back (gain would be deducted) because the cash from the disposal appears in investing activities
  • Increase in receivables means cash has not yet been collected for some revenue, so it is deducted
  • Decrease in inventory means the business has sold more stock than it bought, freeing up cash
  • Increase in payables means the business owes more to suppliers, effectively retaining cash

Section 4: The Direct Method

The direct method reports actual cash receipts and payments from operations directly, without starting from profit.

4.1 Example Using the Direct Method

Item£
Cash received from customers485,000
Cash paid to suppliers(220,000)
Cash paid to employees(95,000)
Other operating cash payments(6,000)
Cash generated from operations164,000
Interest paid(10,000)
Corporation tax paid(25,000)
Net cash from operating activities129,000

Both methods produce the same net cash from operating activities. The direct method is more transparent but requires more detailed data.

Section 5: Complete Cash Flow Statement

£
Cash flows from operating activities
Net cash from operating activities129,000
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchase of property, plant and equipment(80,000)
Proceeds from sale of equipment12,000
Purchase of software(15,000)
Net cash used in investing activities(83,000)
Cash flows from financing activities
Proceeds from new bank loan50,000
Repayment of bank borrowings(30,000)
Dividends paid(20,000)
Net cash from financing activities0
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents46,000
Cash and cash equivalents at start of period30,000
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period76,000

The closing cash balance of £76,000 should agree to the bank and cash balances on the balance sheet .

Section 6: FRS 102 Requirements

6.1 Who Must Prepare a Cash Flow Statement

Under FRS 102 Section 7, all entities preparing financial statements under FRS 102 must include a cash flow statement, with the exception of:

  • Small entities applying Section 1A (the small company regime), which are exempt
  • Qualifying entities applying the reduced disclosure framework under FRS 101

6.2 Classification

FRS 102 requires cash flows to be classified into operating, investing and financing activities. Interest and dividends may be classified in different ways:

ItemFRS 102 classification
Interest paidOperating or financing
Interest receivedOperating or investing
Dividends paidFinancing
Dividends receivedOperating or investing
Tax paidOperating (unless specifically identified with investing or financing)

The classification must be applied consistently from period to period.

6.3 Cash and Cash Equivalents

FRS 102 defines cash equivalents as short-term, highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash and subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value. Typically, investments with a maturity of three months or less from the date of acquisition qualify.

Bank overdrafts that are repayable on demand and form an integral part of cash management may be included as a component of cash and cash equivalents.

Section 7: Analysing the Cash Flow Statement

7.1 Free Cash Flow

Free cash flow is cash from operations minus capital expenditure. It represents the cash available to service debt, pay dividends and fund growth.

Free cash flow = Net cash from operating activities - Capital expenditure

Using the example above: £129,000 - £80,000 = £49,000

This is a key metric used by analysts and lenders when assessing business performance.

7.2 Cash Conversion Ratio

The cash conversion ratio measures how efficiently a business converts its operating profit into cash:

Cash conversion = Net cash from operating activities / Operating profit

A ratio above 100% indicates the business is collecting cash faster than it records profit, which is a positive sign. A consistently low ratio may signal problems with receivables collection or inventory management.

Comparing cash flow statements over several periods reveals important trends:

  • Is operating cash flow growing in line with revenue and profit?
  • Is the business increasing or decreasing capital expenditure?
  • Is the business taking on more debt or repaying it?
  • Are dividends sustainable relative to cash generation?

These financial ratios provide deeper insight when analysed alongside the cash flow statement.

Section 8: Common Pitfalls

8.1 Ignoring Working Capital Changes

A business might generate strong operating profit but consume cash through increasing receivables (slow-paying customers) or rising inventory levels. The cash flow statement highlights these working capital drains.

8.2 Confusing Capital Expenditure with Revenue Expenditure

If a capital item is wrongly expensed, it affects both the income statement and the operating cash flow section. Correct classification ensures investing activities reflect true capital spending.

8.3 Non-Cash Transactions

Some significant transactions do not involve cash and therefore do not appear in the cash flow statement. Examples include:

  • Acquiring an asset through a finance lease
  • Converting debt into equity
  • Non-cash distributions to shareholders

FRS 102 requires disclosure of these transactions in the notes if they are material.

Section 9: The Cash Flow Statement in Context

The cash flow statement works alongside the other financial statements to give a complete picture:

  • The income statement shows profitability on an accrual basis
  • The balance sheet shows financial position at a point in time
  • The cash flow statement shows how cash moved during the period

Together, these three reports allow stakeholders to assess whether a business is profitable, solvent and liquid. The trial balance provides the underlying data from which all three are prepared, and the audit provides independent assurance that they are reliable.

For a broader understanding of how these reports fit together, see our article on accounting fundamentals .