What are the limitations of financial statements?

Financial statements give a snapshot of a company’s financial health, but they’re not perfect. They don’t always show real-time data, can miss qualitative factors like workforce skills or brand value, and may be affected by management’s accounting choices. What other limitations do you think users should keep in mind?
 
Financial statements have a number of drawbacks, including the fact that they only offer a historical perspective and frequently leave out non-financial elements like brand strength or employee satisfaction. They may be biased because they rely on approximations and presumptions. They are also subject to accounting standards and might not accurately reflect current data or shifts in the market.
 
Financial statements have limitations such as relying on historical data, ignoring market value, excluding intangible assets, and being vulnerable to manipulation through accounting policies. They don’t reflect inflation, future risks, or qualitative factors like employee skill or brand strength. They also provide a snapshot, not a complete picture of financial health.
 
Due to their reliance on historical data, disregard for market value, exclusion of intangible assets, and susceptibility to manipulation through accounting practices, financial statements have certain drawbacks. They don't account for future risks, inflation, or qualitative elements like brand strength or personnel talent. Additionally, they only give a partial view of financial health.
 
Financial statements have limitations: they reflect historical data, may not show current market value, rely on estimates and judgments, omit non-monetary factors like employee skill or brand value, and can be affected by accounting policies or errors. They provide useful insight but don’t give a complete business picture.
 
The predictive value of financial statements is limited because they are based on estimates and are historical. They can be manipulated (window dressing) or biased, frequently use historical cost rather than current market value, and omit important non-financial factors (like management quality or brand value).
 
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