The financial statements for Home Depot, Inc., are presented in Appendix E at the end of the

Question:

The financial statements for Home Depot, Inc., are presented in Appendix E at the end of the text. The following additional information (in millions) is available:
Accounts receivable at January 28, 2001 ...... $ 835
Inventories at January 28, 2001 ........... 6,556
Total assets at January 28, 2001 .......... 21,385
Stockholders’ equity at January 28, 2001 ....... 15,005

Instructions
1. Determine the following measures for years ending February 2, 2003 and February 3, 2002, rounding to two digits after the decimal place.
a. Working capital
b. Current ratio
c. Quick ratio
d. Accounts receivable turnover
e. Number of days’ sales in receivables
f. Inventory turnover
g. Number of days’ sales in inventory
h. Ratio of liabilities to stockholders’ equity
i. Ratio of net sales to average total assets
j. Rate earned on average total assets
k. Rate earned on average common stockholders’ equity
l. Price-earnings ratio, assuming that the market price was $21.31 per share on February 2, 2003 and $49.70 on February 3, 2002.
m. Percentage relationship of net income to net sales
2. What conclusions can be drawn from these analyses?

Financial Statements
Financial statements are the standardized formats to present the financial information related to a business or an organization for its users. Financial statements contain the historical information as well as current period’s financial...
Accounts Receivable
Accounts receivables are debts owed to your company, usually from sales on credit. Accounts receivable is business asset, the sum of the money owed to you by customers who haven’t paid.The standard procedure in business-to-business sales is that...
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Accounting

ISBN: 978-0324188004

21st Edition

Authors: Carl s. warren, James m. reeve, Philip e. fess

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