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Adding local short description: "Metric in financial accounting", overriding Wikidata description "total amount of cash generated from operations" |
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{{Short description|Metric in financial accounting}}
In [[financial accounting]], '''operating cash flow''' (OCF), '''cash flow provided by operations'''
▲Cash generated from customers
*
▲*revenue as reported
▲*- increase (decrease) in [[accounts receivable|trade receivables]]
▲*- investment income (disclosed separately)
▲*- other income that is non cash and non sales related
Cash paid to
* [[cost of goods sold|costs of sales]] − Stock Variation = Purchase of goods. (2)
* + all other expenses
*
*
*
Notes
==Operating Cash Flow vs. [[Net Income]], [[Earnings before interest and taxes|EBIT]], and [[EBITDA]]==▼
# ''Operating'': Variations of Assets Suppliers and Clients accounts will be disclosed in the Financial Cash Flow
Since it adjusts for liabilities, receivables, and depreciation, operating cash flow is a more accurate measure of how much cash a company has generated (or used) than traditional measures of profitability such as [[net income]] or [[Earnings before interest and taxes|EBIT]]. For example, a company with numerous fixed assets on its books (e.g. factories, machinery, etc.) would likely have decreased [[net income]] due to [[depreciation]]; however, as depreciation is a non-cash expense<ref>[[wikinvest:depreciation|Definition of depreciation via Wikinvest]]</ref> the operating cash flow would provide a more accurate picture of the company's current cash holdings than the artificially low net income.<ref>[[wikinvest:Operating Cash Flow|Definition of OCF via Wikinvest]]</ref>▼
# Cost of Sales = Stock Out for sales. It is Cash Neutral. Cost of Sales − Stock Variation = Stock out − (Stock out − Stock In) = Stock In = Purchase of goods: Cash Out
▲==Operating Cash Flow vs.
▲Interest is a financing flow. <ref>[[Ross, Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 12th edition, 2019]]</ref> It takes into consideration how the operations are financed or taxed. Since it adjusts for liabilities, receivables, and depreciation, operating cash flow is a more accurate measure of how much cash a company has generated (or used) than traditional measures of profitability such as [[net income]] or [[Earnings before interest and taxes|EBIT]].
[[Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization]] or just [[Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization|EBITDA]] is a kind of operating income which excludes all non-operating and non-cash expenses. With it, factors like [[debt]] financing as well as depreciation, and amortization expenses are stripped out when calculating profitability.<ref name=":0" /> Thus, it can be used to analyze and compare profitability among companies and industries, as it eliminates the effects of financing and capital expenditures (which may also be deemed a demerit of the EBITDA measure). It is also a useful metric for understanding a business’s ability to generate cash flow for its owners and for judging a company’s operating performance. The difference between [[Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization|EBITDA]] and OCF would then reflect how the entity finances its net working capital in the short term. OCF is not a measure of free cash flow and the effect of investment activities would need to be considered to arrive at the free cash flow of the entity.
== See also ==▼
*[[Cash flow]]▼
* [[Cash flow
* [[
==References==
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Management accounting]]
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