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Financial analysis & budgetary control for the non-finance manager

How to read the three statements, run a plan-vs-actual variance loop, and spot red flags in a Malaysian SME's accounts.

By Steph Eng · Carriera·Updated 18 June 2026
The short answer

A non-finance manager reads financial statements using a short set of ratios — liquidity, profitability, efficiency and gearing — then controls performance through budgetary control: set a budget, compare it to actuals, explain the variance and act. In a Malaysian SME, remember SST sits inside cost of goods sold and employer EPF sits inside staff cost. Carriera Academy runs this as an HRD Corp-claimable course.

You do not need an accounting degree to run a department well — but you do need to read the numbers your finance team produces, and to control your slice of the budget. Small and medium enterprises are the backbone of the Malaysian economy: micro, small and medium enterprises contributed RM652.4 billion in value added in 2024, about 39.5% of national GDP and 48.7% of total employment, according to the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOSM) (figures also reported here). In that environment, a line manager who can read a P&L and defend a variance is worth far more than one who cannot. This is the toolkit. Unfamiliar terms are explained in our glossary.

§ 01
The Statements

Which financial statements should I read first?

Which three financial statements should a non-finance manager read first?

Read three statements, in this order, and always together. The income statement tells you whether you made a profit over a period; the balance sheet is a snapshot of what the business owns and owes on one date; and the cash flow statement shows whether that profit actually became cash. Profit on paper and money in the bank are not the same thing — a profitable SME can still run out of cash.

StatementAnswers the questionCovers
Income statement (P&L)Did we make a profit?A period (month / quarter / year)
Balance sheetWhat do we own and owe?A single date (a snapshot)
Cash flow statementDid profit turn into cash?A period (month / quarter / year)

In Malaysia, every company must prepare these statements and lodge them with the Companies Commission of Malaysia (SSM). Under section 259 of the Companies Act 2016, financial statements must be lodged with SSM within 30 days of being circulated to members, per the SSM Part M practice notes on annual returns and financial reporting. So even the smallest Sdn Bhd you work for is producing these documents — learning to read them is not optional knowledge.

§ 02
The Toolkit

The manager's ratio table

Which financial ratios should a manager actually use?

You only need a handful of ratios to read an SME. Group them into four families — liquidity (can we pay our bills?), profitability (are we making money?), efficiency (are we using assets well?) and gearing (how much do we owe?). The table below is the toolkit: the ratio, its formula, and what a manager should read from it.

FamilyRatioFormulaWhat it tells you
LiquidityCurrent ratioCurrent assets ÷ current liabilitiesCan you cover short-term bills? Above 1.0 means current assets exceed current debts.
Quick (acid-test) ratio(Current assets − inventory) ÷ current liabilitiesSame test, but stricter — strips out stock you may not sell fast. Useful for stock-heavy SMEs.
ProfitabilityGross profit margin(Revenue − COGS) ÷ revenueHow much of each ringgit of sales survives the direct cost of goods. Watch it fall when input or SST costs rise.
Net profit marginNet profit ÷ revenueWhat is left after all costs, including overheads, staff and tax. The bottom-line efficiency of the whole business.
Return on equity (ROE)Net profit ÷ shareholders' equityThe return the owners earn on the money they have put in. Lets you compare against simply leaving cash in the bank.
EfficiencyInventory / receivables turnoverCOGS ÷ average inventory; or sales ÷ average receivablesHow fast you convert stock into sales, and invoices into cash. Slow turnover ties up working capital.
GearingDebt-to-equityTotal debt ÷ shareholders' equityHow much of the business is funded by borrowing versus owners' money. Higher gearing means higher risk if sales dip.

Read a ratio in three steps: compare it to last period, compare it to budget, then ask one question — why did it move?

A single ratio in isolation means little. Its power comes from trend (this month versus last) and comparison (actual versus budget, or against an industry norm). A current ratio of 1.4 is neither good nor bad until you know it was 2.1 last quarter — that fall is the story. This habit of comparing the number to a plan is exactly what budgetary control formalises.

§ 03
The Local Layer

What changes in a Malaysian SME?

How do SST and EPF change how I read the accounts?

Two Malaysian realities sit quietly inside the statements, and a manager who misses them will misread the margins.

  • SST is buried in your cost of goods sold. Malaysia's Sales and Service Tax is generally not recoverable the way the old GST input credit was. Sales tax on taxable goods and service tax on certain inputs stay embedded in COGS and operating costs — they are a genuine cost, not a pass-through. So when your gross margin compresses, rising SST-inclusive input costs may be part of the cause. The authority is the Royal Malaysian Customs Department, which administers SST via mysst.customs.gov.my.
  • EPF, SOCSO and EIS sit inside staff cost. The employer's EPF (KWSP) contribution, plus SOCSO and EIS, are statutory on-costs on top of gross salary. The true cost of a hire is the loaded cost, not the headline pay — so budget salary plus employer statutory contributions. The authorities are KWSP (EPF) and PERKESO (SOCSO); verify the current rates there before budgeting.

These cost layers are also why Carriera screens for finance literacy when we place management roles through our recruitment service — a manager who understands the loaded cost of headcount makes better hiring decisions. For the tax side of the picture, see our note on company tax planning for Malaysian SMEs.

§ 04
The Control Loop

What is budgetary control?

What is budgetary control and how does the loop work?

Budgetary control is a continuous loop, not a once-a-year form. You set the budget, record actuals, calculate the variance, investigate it, then act and feed what you learn into the next budget. A variance is favourable when it improves profit (you spent less, or earned more) and adverse when it hurts profit (you spent more, or earned less). The number itself is just a flag — the value is the corrective action it triggers.

1

Plan

Set the budget for the period — revenue, costs and headcount — based on a realistic forecast, not last year plus a guess.

2

Record

Capture actuals as they happen, in the same line structure as the budget so they can be compared like-for-like.

3

Compare

Calculate the variance (actual minus budget) for each line and flag the ones that are material.

4

Act

Investigate the cause, take corrective action, and feed the lesson into the next budget cycle.

Can you show a worked plan-vs-actual variance example?

Yes. Here is one month of a simple departmental budget. Read the variance column, then the cause — that final step is where management actually happens.

LineBudget (RM)Actual (RM)Variance (RM)F / A
Revenue200,000188,000−12,000Adverse
Cost of goods sold120,000117,000+3,000Favourable
Gross profit80,00071,000−9,000Adverse
Staff cost (incl. employer EPF/SOCSO)40,00043,500−3,500Adverse
Other overheads15,00014,200+800Favourable
Net profit25,00013,300−11,700Adverse

The headline net-profit variance is RM11,700 adverse — but the loop is about why. Revenue fell RM12,000 short (the main driver); staff cost ran RM3,500 over (perhaps overtime, or an under-budgeted employer EPF on-cost); COGS and overheads came in slightly favourable. The action items write themselves: investigate the revenue shortfall first, then the staff-cost overrun, and check whether the EPF/SOCSO loading was budgeted correctly. A favourable variance gets the same scrutiny — if COGS came in low because quality was cut, that is a problem dressed as good news.

§ 05
The Warning Signs

Red flags in the accounts

What are the red flags to look for in an SME's accounts?

Use this as a quick checklist when a set of accounts lands on your desk. Any one item is a question to ask, not a verdict — but several together warrant a serious conversation with finance.

  • Profit rising, cash falling. If the P&L shows profit but the cash flow statement and bank balance are shrinking, profit is trapped in unpaid invoices or unsold stock.
  • Receivables growing faster than sales. Customers are taking longer to pay — a classic working-capital squeeze. Check the receivables turnover.
  • Inventory building up. Rising stock with flat sales ties up cash and risks obsolescence and write-downs.
  • Gross margin quietly compressing. A slow slide in gross margin can signal rising input or SST-inclusive costs not passed on in price.
  • Gearing climbing. A rising debt-to-equity ratio means more of the business is funded by borrowing — fine until sales dip and the interest still falls due.
  • Current ratio dropping below 1.0. Current liabilities now exceed current assets — a short-term solvency warning.
  • Persistent adverse variances in the same line. One bad month is noise; the same adverse variance for three months is a broken assumption in the budget.
  • Statutory costs under-provided. If employer EPF, SOCSO, EIS or SST liabilities are not fully reflected, the accounts flatter the true cost base.

Whether your company even needs an audit is itself changing. Under SSM Practice Directive 10/2024, certain private companies can be exempt from audit if they meet a two-of-three test on revenue, total assets and employee count, phased in for financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2025 (as reported by BERNAMA citing SSM). Exempt or not, the company must still prepare and lodge financial statements — so the manager's job of reading them does not go away. This sits alongside other compliance duties; reporting institutions, for example, also carry obligations under AMLA.

§ 06
FAQ

Financial analysis & budgetary control — FAQ

Which three financial statements should a non-finance manager read first?
Read the income statement (profit and loss) to see whether the business made money over the period, the balance sheet (statement of financial position) to see what it owns and owes on a given date, and the cash flow statement to see whether profit actually turned into cash. In a Malaysian SME, profit on paper does not guarantee cash in the bank, so always read all three together.
What is budgetary control and how does it work?
Budgetary control is a continuous loop: set a budget (the plan), record actuals as they happen, calculate the variance (actual minus budget), investigate why each material variance occurred, then act and feed the lesson into the next budget. A variance is favourable when it improves profit and adverse when it reduces profit. The point is not the number but the conversation and corrective action it triggers.
How does SST affect a Malaysian SME's cost of goods sold?
Malaysia's Sales and Service Tax (SST) is generally not recoverable, unlike the old GST input-tax credit. Sales tax paid on taxable goods and service tax on certain inputs therefore stay embedded in your cost of goods sold and operating costs rather than being claimed back. When you read margins, remember SST is a real cost sitting inside COGS, so a manager must factor it into pricing rather than treat it as a pass-through.
Is EPF part of staff cost in the accounts?
Yes. The employer's EPF (KWSP) contribution, along with SOCSO and EIS, is a statutory on-cost that sits inside total staff cost in the income statement, on top of gross salaries. When you budget for a new hire or read the payroll line, the true cost is salary plus employer EPF, SOCSO and EIS, not just the gross salary, so always budget the loaded cost.
Do all Malaysian companies still need audited accounts?
Not all. Under SSM Practice Directive 10/2024, certain private companies may be exempt from audit if they meet a two-of-three test on revenue, total assets and employee count, phased in from financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2025. All companies must still prepare financial statements and lodge them with SSM within 30 days of circulation under section 259 of the Companies Act 2016. Check the current threshold against SSM before relying on it.

This article is general management education, not accounting, tax or legal advice. Verify SST rates with the Royal Malaysian Customs Department, EPF/SOCSO rates with KWSP and PERKESO, and filing obligations with SSM, before acting. Updated 18 June 2026.

Turn your managers into confident readers of the numbers

Carriera Academy runs Driving Smarter Decisions through Financial Analysis, Budgetary Control & AMLA — an HRD Corp-claimable (SBL-Khas) programme that takes non-finance managers through statements, ratios, the variance loop and red flags, with the Malaysian SST and EPF context built in. See all training programmes or message us to scope an in-house run.