Cash Flow Statement
The Cash Flow Statement is the third of LedgerBuk’s three financial pillars. It shows where your cash actually went during a period — because profit on paper doesn’t always mean cash in your account.
Purpose
Section titled “Purpose”This report answers: “Where did the cash go?”
A business can be profitable but still run short on cash. For example, if you sold KES 500,000 worth of services but customers haven’t paid yet, that money is stuck in receivables — not in your bank account. The Cash Flow Statement shows you the real picture.
Accessing the Cash Flow Statement
Section titled “Accessing the Cash Flow Statement”- Navigate to Reports → Cash Flow in the sidebar
- Select the period (annual, quarterly, monthly, or custom date range)
- The report generates automatically
How It Works
Section titled “How It Works”The report takes your profit from the Profit & Loss report and works backward to figure out what actually happened with cash:
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Start with Profit for the Period
This is the same profit number from your Profit & Loss report.
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Add back non-cash items
Some expenses (like depreciation) reduce your profit on paper but don’t actually take cash out of your account. These get added back.
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Adjust for changes in what’s owed
If customers owe you more than last month (receivables went up), that means cash hasn’t arrived yet — so it’s subtracted. If you owe suppliers more (payables went up), you’re holding onto cash longer — so it’s added.
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Show equipment purchases and loans separately
Buying a vehicle or receiving a bank loan are big cash events that aren’t part of daily operations. They’re shown in their own sections.
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Check: Beginning Cash + Net Change = Ending Cash
The final reconciliation — your ending cash should match what’s on the Balance Sheet.
Reading the Report
Section titled “Reading the Report”Operating Activities
Section titled “Operating Activities”Cash from day-to-day business — the core of your operations.
| Line | Example | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Profit for the period | KES 150,000 | Starting point — from Profit & Loss |
| Depreciation | KES 20,000 | Didn’t use cash, so we add it back |
| Increase in Receivables | (KES 30,000) | Customers owe you more — cash not yet received |
| Increase in Payables | KES 15,000 | You owe suppliers more — holding onto cash longer |
| Net Cash from Operations | KES 155,000 | Actual cash generated from running the business |
Investing Activities
Section titled “Investing Activities”Cash spent on or received from long-term assets — equipment, vehicles, property.
| Line | Example | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase of Equipment | (KES 200,000) | Cash paid for new equipment |
| Net Cash from Investing | (KES 200,000) | Total cash spent on investments |
Financing Activities
Section titled “Financing Activities”Cash from or to owners and lenders — loans, owner investment, dividends.
| Line | Example | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Loan Proceeds | KES 100,000 | Cash received from a bank loan |
| Owner Capital | KES 50,000 | Owner invested more money |
| Net Cash from Financing | KES 150,000 | Total cash from financing |
Summary
Section titled “Summary”Net Cash from Operations: KES 155,000Net Cash from Investing: (KES 200,000)Net Cash from Financing: KES 150,000 ───────────Net Change in Cash: KES 105,000Beginning Cash: KES 200,000Ending Cash: KES 305,000 ✓ ReconciledCash Account Breakdown
Section titled “Cash Account Breakdown”At the bottom of the report, you’ll see a breakdown of each cash account — showing how each one changed during the period:
| Account | Beginning | Ending |
|---|---|---|
| Cash on Hand | KES 50,000 | KES 55,000 |
| KCB Bank Account | KES 100,000 | KES 200,000 |
| M-Pesa Float | KES 50,000 | KES 50,000 |
| Total | KES 200,000 | KES 305,000 |
This total should match the cash balance on your Balance Sheet.
Account Setup for Accurate Reports
Section titled “Account Setup for Accurate Reports”For the Cash Flow Statement to classify your accounts correctly, certain account flags need to be set. See Account Flags for the complete guide.
| Flag | Set On | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Payment Account | Cash, Bank, M-Pesa accounts | So the report knows which accounts hold cash |
| Cash Equivalent | Money market funds, T-bills (≤3 months) | Treated as cash, not as a change in what’s owed |
| Non-Cash Expense | Depreciation, amortization | So the report knows to add these back |
Template accounts have these flags set automatically. For custom accounts, toggle them when adding or editing the account.
Printing
Section titled “Printing”Click the Print button for a clean, print-ready version that includes:
- Your organization name and logo
- Period dates
- All three activity sections
- Cash reconciliation summary
How It Connects to Other Reports
Section titled “How It Connects to Other Reports”| Report | Connection |
|---|---|
| Profit & Loss | The profit shown there is the starting point of this report |
| Balance Sheet | Your ending cash here should match the cash balance on the Balance Sheet |
| Trial Balance | Run this first to confirm your books are balanced |
Next Steps
Section titled “Next Steps”- Learn about the Balance Sheet to see your financial position
- Learn about the Profit & Loss to understand profitability
- Return to the Reports Overview for the full picture