Walking through doesn’t necessarily involve saying which sheet is most important. For valuation, you want to know what current assets are worth, and what kinds of cash flows can be expected from owning them. The balance sheet is where you start to get an idea of the former, the income statement helps you see how the balance sheet changes between two time periods, and the cash flow statement gives probably the best picture of whether operations and cash flows can be considered “sustainable” over the long term.
The statements also give you a picture of risk. The balance sheet gives you the leverage info which helps you see how changes in sales transfer into changes in equity values. The income statement separates out how much of income is from normal operations and how much is random wierd stuff (and long term you can see how often random wierd stuff tends to happen with this management). Comparing cash flows with earnings can give you a sense of whether there are accounting shenanigans going on.
You could walk a dollar of sales through the income statement and show how it ends up as partly COGS, part SG&A, part interest, part taxes, part extraordinary stuff, part dividends, and part retained earnings on the balance sheet. Explaining how it goes int cash flow statements is a little trickier.
The statements also give you a picture of risk. The balance sheet gives you the leverage info which helps you see how changes in sales transfer into changes in equity values. The income statement separates out how much of income is from normal operations and how much is random wierd stuff (and long term you can see how often random wierd stuff tends to happen with this management). Comparing cash flows with earnings can give you a sense of whether there are accounting shenanigans going on.
You could walk a dollar of sales through the income statement and show how it ends up as partly COGS, part SG&A, part interest, part taxes, part extraordinary stuff, part dividends, and part retained earnings on the balance sheet. Explaining how it goes int cash flow statements is a little trickier.