LOS A requires us to:
describe the objective of financial reporting and the importance of financial
reporting standards in security analysis and valuation.
Before understanding the importance and objectives of financial reporting, it is important to understand that recently there has been a shift in the focus towards ‘financial reporting’ from ‘financial statements’. The main reason behind the same is that the financial statements merely consist of the annual reports of the company such as the income statement, the balance sheet, the cash flow statement, and the statement of changes in equity. These statements are not enough to provide the total information required to the users of these statements. The information supplied by these statements is usually supported by additional information in the form of notes to the accounts, the directors’ statements, the auditor’s report, etc. This additional information makes the financial statement more understandable and complete, and together, the reporting in these statements constitutes financial reporting.
Thus, the major objectives of financial reporting are:

a. To provide useful information to all the users of the financial statements. These users are various stakeholders of the company, including the shareholders (both current and potential), the lenders, creditors, etc. They usually need information regarding the past performance, the current position, the present, and expected profitability, the possibility of bankruptcy, and the assessment of operational efficiency of the firm.
b. The information so provided should be comparable across different companies within the industry and outside. When a transaction is recorded in the accounting system, there is more than one way of doing it. The differences can arise, mainly, on the account of the differences in the accounting estimates and assumptions used by the preparers of these statements. The boards responsible for setting the financial reporting standards are continuously working on providing principles-based standards which will possibly narrow the range of such acceptable responses, thus making the financial reports more comparable.