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Home » Deep Briefs »  » What Is a Cash Flow Statement? (And Why Investors Should Actually Care About It)

What Is a Cash Flow Statement? (And Why Investors Should Actually Care About It)

Author: Nate Gregory
Published: Mar 16, 2026 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:

A cash flow statement shows how money actually moves through a company.

Not just what it earned, but how much real cash came in, where it was spent, and what's left.

It has three sections: Operations, investing, and financing.

Many investors don’t realize that public companies have to file several important documents with the SEC.

These documents tell investors everything they need to know about a company - from how leadership is changing to how revenue is moving by quarter or year.

But there are few different statements that help investors understand what is going on with a company’s financials.

One is the income statement - a snapshot of how much a company made and what its expenses were.

The other is the balance sheet - a window into what a company owes, and owns.

The last would be the cash flow statement - which shows how money actually moved through the company.

Why does this matter? A company can look profitable on paper and still be running out of money.

The cash flow statement is how you catch where these dollars are going and how a company is actually managing its cash.

If you're learning how to analyze stocks, this is the one financial document you can't afford to skip.

Let’s break down what a cash flow statement is, where to find it, how to read it, and more.

Reading a cash flow statement is just one step to analyzing a company.

Our CEO Jaspreet Singh is hosting a free live investor workshop on March 18th where he’s breaking down how to spot market shifts and investing opportunities.

Register for free here.

The Simplest Way to Think About A Cash Flow Statement

Think of the cash flow statement like a personal budget spreadsheet.

Your paycheck is income. 

Your rent, groceries, and Netflix are expenses. 

But then there's also the money you put into your 401(k), or the loan you took out to buy a car. 

All of that tells the real story of your money - not just what you earned.

A cash flow statement does the same thing for a company.

It shows the flow of money in and out of a business over the course of a year or quarter.

Why The Cash Flow Statement Matters

Companies have three main financial statements: the balance sheet, the income statement, and the cash flow statement.

  • The balance sheet is like a company's net worth statement - assets minus liabilities.
  • The income statement is the profit and loss statement - revenue minus expenses.
  • The cash flow statement shows how money actually moved through the business.

The income statement can look better on paper due to accounting tricks.

The cash flow statement is much harder to spin. 

It's showing you the actual cash - what came in, what went out, and what's left.

That's why many experienced investors consider it the most important financial statement of the three.

The 3 Sections On The Cash Flow Statement Every Investor Needs to Know

Let's break down the three parts of a cash flow statement.

1. Cash Flow from Operations

This is the money a company generates just from running its business.

It starts with net income - the profit from the income statement. 

Then the net income needs to be adjusted. 

Things like depreciation (a non-cash expense that gets added back) and changes in working capital - like inventory, receivables, and accounts payable.

The final number is called net cash provided by operating activities. This is how much real cash the company generated from doing its job.

For example: Home Depot generated roughly $16.6 billion in cash from operations in 2021. That's the number that tells you how the business is working.

2. Cash Flow from Investing

This section covers money spent on growing the business.

That includes things like buying new property, upgrading equipment, building new locations, or acquiring other companies. 

These are called capital expenditures - or CapEx for short.

A company spending heavily here isn't necessarily a bad sign. It often means management is building for the future.

Home Depot spent about $2.6 billion in capital expenditures in 2021 - opening stores, investing in infrastructure, etc.

In 2025 and 2026, tech companies announced they would be spending hundreds of billions of dollars building out tech like data centers for AI.

3. Cash Flow from Financing

This is where you see how a company raises and returns money.

If a company takes on new debt, that's a cash inflow. If it pays off debt, that's a cash outflow. 

If it pays dividends to shareholders or buys back its own stock - that shows up here too.

Home Depot is a great example. In 2021, they used over $15 billion to buy back their own stock, plus $7 billion in dividends. 

They spent more than they generated from operations - but they had the balance sheet to back it up.

That's management saying: "We've got enough. Let's return it to shareholders."

What You're Really Looking For On The Cash Flow Statement

When investors read a cash flow statement, they're asking a few key questions:

  • Is this business actually generating cash from its core operations?
  • Is it reinvesting in growth, or is it coasting?
  • Is it returning cash to shareholders - and can it afford to?

The number that answers the first question is free cash flow - the cash left over after operating expenses and capital expenditures are paid. 

That's the cash a company could theoretically hand to investors tomorrow.

A company with strong, growing free cash flow is generally a healthier investment than one that just looks profitable on the surface.

Where to Find a Cash Flow Statement

Every publicly traded company publishes its cash flow statement in its 10-K or 10-Q - that's the annual/quarterly report filed with the SEC.

You can find it for free at:

  • The company's investor relations page.
  • The SEC website (sec.gov).
  • Free platforms like Yahoo Finance or Google Finance.

Look for the line "Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities." That's your starting point.

The Cash Flow Statement: Final Thoughts 

A cash flow statement tells you what a company actually did with its money - not just what it reported earning.

It has three sections - operations, investing, and financing - and together they show you the full financial picture of a business.

If you're analyzing stocks, always read it alongside the income statement and balance sheet.

No single document tells the whole story.

Reminder: Our CEO Jaspreet Singh is hosting a free live investor workshop on March 18th where he’s breaking down how to spot market shifts and investing opportunities.

Register for free here.


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