Financial statement that reconciles opening equity to closing equity through profit, other comprehensive income, dividends, and owner transactions.
The statement of changes in equity reconciles the opening and closing balances of shareholder equity over a reporting period. It shows how profit, other comprehensive income, dividends, share issues, buybacks, and reserve movements changed equity.
This statement usually explains movements in:
share capital
additional paid-in capital
retained earnings
accumulated other comprehensive income
treasury share adjustments
other reserves required by the reporting framework
It matters because the balance sheet only shows the ending equity position. The statement of changes in equity explains how the business got there.
In simplified form, the reconciliation is:
That means the statement connects earnings, dividend policy, and capital transactions in one place.
Analysts use the statement of changes in equity to understand:
whether equity growth came from profits or fresh capital
how much earnings were retained versus distributed
whether other comprehensive income materially affected equity
how share issuance or buybacks changed the capital base
It is especially useful when headline net income looks stable but the equity base moved for other reasons.
Suppose a company begins the year with $400 million of equity. During the year it reports:
net income of $60 million
other comprehensive loss of $5 million
dividends of $20 million
new share issuance of $30 million
Then closing equity is:
Closing equity is $465 million.
The balance sheet reports equity at a single date.
The statement of changes in equity reports the movement across the whole period.
That distinction matters when users want to understand not only the size of equity, but also the drivers behind the change.
Shareholder Equity: The balance being reconciled.
Statement of Comprehensive Income: Helps explain the income items that feed equity changes.
Statement of Retained Earnings: A narrower statement focused on one major equity component.
Balance Sheet: Shows the ending equity position at the reporting date.
Retained Earnings: A major component of equity that often changes through profit and dividends.