Why is it so important to check my annual reports? Isn’t that what I pay the accountant for?
Yes and no. You pay your accountant to produce your annual statements and to submit your self-assessment, but you are still legally required to check the reports before they are finalised. It’s important that you understand the reports you are given.
If you are a charity trustee, it’s even more important that you understand the reports as you are required by the charity commission to confirm that you are happy with them. How can you do this if you don’t know what you’re looking at?
Let’s begin with the Income and Expenditure report (or I&E), also called the “Statement of Financial Position” (or SoFA) and the “Statement of Profit and Loss” (or SPL), depending on who has produced it and whether it is for a charity or not.
Every good Income and Expenditure report will begin with a summary of all the income received in the year, then summarise all the expenses incurred in the year and end with a profit or loss calculation (this can also be called the “Net movement in funds figure”). The basic income figures can be broken down into various categories such as donations, trading income, grants, and legacies while the expenditure figures will probably be subdivided into cost of sales, payroll, utilities etc. Charities have an extra line between their total expenditure figure and the net movement in funds to show any transfers between funds.
While business accounts usually only display this year’s figures in one column beside last years figures for easy comparison, charity accounts are subdivided into several columns indicating the proportion of funds received and spent from unrestricted and restricted funds, and endowments or legacies. This way of presenting charity I&E reports can make their year-end reports much harder to read if you’re not a numbers person.
Moving on to the balance sheet (also called the “Statement of Financial Position”, or the SFP). For charities and normal businesses this report has more similarities making it easier to understand if you are accustomed to looking at reports produced for a different business or charity setup..
Your balance sheet should always include sections for your assets and liabilities. Your assets will include things owned by the business (your physical assets like the building you operate from and stock waiting to be sold), the amount of money available to the business (in the bank, as cash in hand and as unpaid invoices) and any investments made. While your liabilities will include summaries of any unpaid supplier invoices, any payroll liabilities (such as any tax due to HMRC by the 19th of the following month) and any loans owed by the business or charity. By subtracting the liabilities from the assets, you get the total net asset or liability figure. I hope it’s always a positive, net asset figure for you as this indicates the business is in a much safer long-term position even if your profit figure is negative for the short-term forecasts.
Below these figures on the balance sheet, you will find another set of figures. This is where things get most different between charity and business reports. At the end of a charity’s balance sheet it must have an analysis of its retained funds, where a business balance sheet will detail the owner’s capital and drawings. However, it is essential that the total figure at the end of this summary matches the total net asset or liability figure further up the balance sheet, as this is a key check that the reports have been prepared correctly.
In this final section you should also find a figure you recognise from the Income and Expenditure report. Charities call it the “Accumulated Funds”, and small businesses give it various names including “Current year Earnings”. This is the profit or loss figure or the Net movement in funds figure. This is also another check you need to make to confirm the reports are consistent. If you can’t find the bottom-line figure from your Income and Expenditure report in the analysis at the end of the balance sheet, a mistake has been made somewhere and you are well advised to refuse the report until the discrepancy has been resolved.
You should now have a basic understanding of your two primary End of Year reports. If you need more help understanding them, please get in touch.