
Vertical Analysis: Overview
Vertical analysis is a method of financial statement analysis in which each line item is listed as a percentage of a base figure within the statement. Thus, line items on an income statement can be stated as a percentage of gross sales, while line items on a balance sheet can be stated as a percentage of total assets or liabilities, and vertical analysis of a cash flow statement shows each cash inflow or outflow as a percentage of the total cash inflows. Another form of financial statement analysis used in ratio analysis is horizontal analysis or trend analysis. Vertical analysis is a method of financial statement analysis in which each line item is listed as a percentage of a base figure within the statement. These types of financial statements, including detailed vertical analysis, are also known as common-size financial statements and are used by many companies to provide greater detail on a company’s financial position.

What Is Vertical Analysis?
Vertical analysis is a method of financial statement analysis in which each line item is listed as a percentage of a base figure within the statement. Thus, line items on an income statement can be stated as a percentage of gross sales, while line items on a balance sheet can be stated as a percentage of total assets or liabilities, and vertical analysis of a cash flow statement shows each cash inflow or outflow as a percentage of the total cash inflows.


How Vertical Analysis Works
Vertical analysis makes it much easier to compare the financial statements of one company with another, and across industries. This is because one can see the relative proportions of account balances. It also makes it easier to compare previous periods for time series analysis, in which quarterly and annual figures are compared over a number of years, in order to gain a picture of whether performance metrics are improving or deteriorating.
For example, by showing the various expense line items in the income statement as a percentage of sales, one can see how these are contributing to profit margins and whether profitability is improving over time. It thus becomes easier to compare the profitability of a company with its peers.
Financial statements that include vertical analysis clearly show line item percentages in a separate column. These types of financial statements, including detailed vertical analysis, are also known as common-size financial statements and are used by many companies to provide greater detail on a company’s financial position.
Common-size financial statements often incorporate comparative financial statements that include columns comparing each line item to a previously reported period.
Vertical analysis is used in order to gain a picture of whether performance metrics are improving or deteriorating.
Vertical vs. Horizontal Analysis
Another form of financial statement analysis used in ratio analysis is horizontal analysis or trend analysis. This is where ratios or line items in a company's financial statements are compared over a certain period of time by choosing one year's worth of entries as a baseline, while every other year represents percentage differences in terms of changes to that baseline.
For example, the amount of cash reported on the balance sheet on December 31 of 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, and 2014 will be expressed as a percentage of the December 31, 2014, amount. Instead of dollar amounts, you might see 141, 135, 126, 118, and 100.
This shows that the amount of cash at the end of 2018 is 141% of the amount it was at the end of 2014. By doing the same analysis for each item on the balance sheet and income statement, one can see how each item has changed in relationship to the other items.
Example of Vertical Analysis
For example, suppose XYZ Corporation has gross sales of $5 million and cost of goods sold of $1 million and general and administrative expenses of $2 million and a 25% tax rate, its income statement will look like this if vertical analysis is used:
Cost of goods sold
Gross profit
General and Administrative Expenses
Operating Income
Taxes (%25)
Related terms:
Account Analysis
Account analysis is a process in which detailed line items in a financial transaction or statement are carefully examined for a given account. An account analysis can help identify trends or give an indication of how an account is performing. read more
Accounting
Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more
Common Size Financial Statement
A common size financial statement allows for easy analysis between companies or between periods for a company. It displays all items as percentages of a common base figure rather than as absolute numerical figures. read more
Common Size Income Statement
A common size income statement is an income statement in which each line item is expressed as a percentage of the value of sales, to make analysis easier. read more
Financial Statement Analysis & Examples
Financial statement analysis is the process of analyzing a company's financial statements for decision-making purposes. read more
Financial Performance
Financial performance measures how well a firm uses assets from operations and generates revenues. Read how to analyze financial performance before investing. read more
Gross Sales
Gross sales is a metric for the overall sales of a company, unadjusted for costs incurred in generating those sales, as well as things like discounts or returns from customers. It's calculated with a simple equation, where all sales invoices or related invoices are totaled. read more
Horizontal Analysis
Horizontal analysis is used in financial statement analysis to compare historical data, such as ratios or line items, over a number of accounting periods. read more
Trend Analysis
Trend analysis is a technique used in technical analysis that attempts to predict future stock price movements based on recently observed trend data. read more