Slightly confused with this question:
If depreciation expense was understated in a company’s financials, CFO presented under the indirect method assuming a tax-free environment is most likely:
A. Accurately stated
B. Understated
C. Overstated
Answer: A –> A change in depreciation has no impact on cash flow whatsoever. An increase in deprecation would reduce net income (the starting point of the indirect cash flow statement) but have no effect on total cash flow.
I know depreciation is a non-cash expense but doesn’t it still affect CFO because it gets added back during the calculation? Is it because the question mentioned a “tax-free environment”?
If depreciation expense was understated in a company’s financials, CFO presented under the indirect method assuming a tax-free environment is most likely:
A. Accurately stated
B. Understated
C. Overstated
Answer: A –> A change in depreciation has no impact on cash flow whatsoever. An increase in deprecation would reduce net income (the starting point of the indirect cash flow statement) but have no effect on total cash flow.
I know depreciation is a non-cash expense but doesn’t it still affect CFO because it gets added back during the calculation? Is it because the question mentioned a “tax-free environment”?