Pro forma financial statements are projected versions of the Income statement, Balance sheet, and Statement of cash flows for future periods — typically the next 2-3 years. They translate the business’s forecasts (revenue, costs, capital spending) into the same three-statement structure used for historical reporting. They are strictly planning tools — there are no legal reporting requirements, and they’re not binding.
The phrase pro forma is Latin for “as a matter of form” — these are the statements as if the forecasts come true.
Historical statements vs pro forma:
| Historical | Pro forma | |
|---|---|---|
| Time direction | Past | Future |
| Reporting frequency | Quarterly / annual | Annual, 2-3 years out |
| Required? | Yes for public cos (SEDAR/EDGAR) | No |
| Binding? | Yes (audited) | No |
| Use | Investors, regulators, history | Internal planning, raising capital |
Pro forma statements are central to several business activities:
- Business plans (see Business plan) — investors want to see projected financials to evaluate the venture.
- Loan applications — lenders need to see how borrowed money will be deployed and repaid.
- Internal capital allocation — comparing projected returns from different proposed projects.
- Strategic planning — testing whether a strategy produces acceptable financial outcomes.
The risk of pro forma statements: they look authoritative (same format as audited statements!), but they’re only as good as the assumptions behind them. A pro forma showing strong growth is just a forecast; it doesn’t guarantee anything. The key is the assumptions sheet — an explicit list of what the projections depend on (sales growth rate, gross margin, customer acquisition cost, working capital requirements). Without it, the numbers are meaningless.
For the historical counterparts see Income statement, Balance sheet, Statement of cash flows. For the management context see Financial management and Business plan.