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theory1 min readLesson 7.4

Cash Flow Statement

Finance — Read the Numbers · 25 min

The Cash Flow Statement shows where cash came from and where it went. Three sections: (1) Operating — cash from business operations, (2) Investing — cash spent on assets (equipment, R&D), (3) Financing — cash from investors or loans. The sum = net change in cash.

A profitable company can still have negative cash flow (if customers pay late and suppliers demand early payment). Cash flow tells the real story.

Key Takeaways

  • Cash flow has 3 sections: Operating, Investing, Financing.
  • Revenue ≠ cash received. Track the actual cash.
  • Equipment purchases = investing. Funding rounds = financing.
  • Free Cash Flow = Operating CF - CapEx.

Frequently Asked Questions

A company invoices €100K in December but receives payment in February. In December's cash flow statement, this shows as:

Answer: €0 cash inflow

Cash flow tracks ACTUAL cash movement. The invoice is revenue (P&L) in December, but cash arrives in February.

Buying a €50K ultrasound device appears in which section?

Answer: Investing activities

Capital expenditures (buying equipment) are investing activities.

Receiving €2M from a Series A round appears in which section?

Answer: Financing activities

Equity financing from investors is a financing activity. It's NOT revenue.