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Creating Pro-Forma Financial Statements for Your Cannabis Business

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Part of being an entrepreneur is having to wear many hats. As a business owner, you’re also the head of HR, chief marketing officer, and – for better or worse – the head accountant. Many business owners find accounting and preparing financial statements one of the most difficult and confusing parts of running a company. And, when you’re running a cannabis business, financial accounting can reach a whole new level of complicated.

However, mastering your financial reports is one of the key skills to surviving in California’s competitive cannabis industry. One way to make your venture stand out from the competition? Pro-forma financial statements. This reporting tool is integral to proving your business has what it takes to be successful long-term. Show off the very best side of your cannabis business using pro-forma reporting: here’s how.  

What are pro-forma financial statements?

In the accounting world, financial results are reported in compliance with two broad accounting standards: generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and pro-forma. These statements offer investors a better understanding of the operating efficiency and economic health of a company. While the data is the same on both statements, pro-forma differs from GAAP in the way the financial charges are presented. Pro-forma financial statements are designed to “draw focus” to specific figures in a company’s earnings report, usually to indicate a major change in the company’s operations (like an acquisition or a merger). Sometimes, companies use pro-forma statements to make their financial results appear better than they really are. Pro-forma figures can depart dramatically from GAAP statements to paint a rosy picture of a company’s financial health.

Pro-forma vs. GAAP statements

There’s a very big difference between pro-forma statements and GAAP statements. Pro-forma earnings’ statements include “estimates,” hypothetical amounts built into the earnings’ results that depict what a bottom line might look like if certain non-recurring items were excluded from the balance sheet. For example, if your company purchased a major piece of equipment for a one-time cost of $100,000, you might leave that expense out of your pro-forma statement to give a more “accurate” picture of your long-term financial health. Many companies leave out these one-time expenses because they do not have extended (negative) impact on a company’s overall valuation.

The difficulty in comparing pro-forma statements with GAAP statements is that it is up to the company’s discretion which expenses get included or left out of the pro-forma statement. GAAP is considered the “official” profitability statement, as every liability and income stream is accounted for on a GAAP financial statement. There are no universal guidelines that a business must adhere to when producing a pro-forma statement.

How to build pro-forma financial statements

Cannabis businesses typically have higher startup costs. Therefore, a pro-forma statement may be more attractive if you’re trying to demonstrate the long-term viability of your venture to an investor. How do you make a pro-forma statement?

Start with your current income statement and try to project into the future. What are the biggest line items that you’ve spent money on recently? Are these recurring expenses, or one-time costs? Typical one-time expenses a cannabis company might be able to take off a pro-forma statement include real estate, permits and licensing fees, and, if you’re a cultivator or manufacturer, equipment. Separate your recurring expenses from these one-time expenditures to give a clear picture of what your long-term operating costs will look like.

Ideally, pro-forma statements are prepared at the end of the year. This gives you a clear picture of what your final sales will be. Much like projecting reductions in your expenses, you can project increases in your revenue. What will your business do differently to increase sales? Will you have new promotions, a change in pricing, or will you reach new customers? These factors can all help inform your pro-forma sales projections.

Other specific items considered in building your pro-forma financial statements include:

What to include in pro-forma financial statements

Many cannabis businesses are new businesses, and entrepreneurs within this industry operate many different types of ventures. Cultivators, retailers, manufacturers, and distributors all have very different expenditures and income sources. So what should you include on your pro-forma statement?

The short answer is that this depends on the type of pro-forma financial statement you are issuing. Here are the types of pro-forma financial statements you might use.

Other circumstances where you might want pro-forma financial statements include:

Pro-forma financial statements are particularly useful to cannabis companies looking to show their potential for success to outside investors, as well as benchmark their own growth. Pro-forma financial statements decrease the impact of major one-time expenditures, essentially smoothing over liabilities that can seem prohibitively expensive on traditional GAAP statements.

Whether just starting out in the cannabis industry or taking your company to the next level, pro-forma financial statements can help clarify your business’s financial health.

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