financial-reporting
Use this skill when preparing P&L statements, balance sheets, cash flow reports, board decks, or KPI dashboards. Triggers on financial statements, P&L, balance sheet, cash flow statement, board reporting, KPI dashboards, investor reporting, and any task requiring financial report preparation or presentation.
operations financial-reportingp-and-lbalance-sheetcash-flowboard-decksWhat is financial-reporting?
Use this skill when preparing P&L statements, balance sheets, cash flow reports, board decks, or KPI dashboards. Triggers on financial statements, P&L, balance sheet, cash flow statement, board reporting, KPI dashboards, investor reporting, and any task requiring financial report preparation or presentation.
financial-reporting
financial-reporting is a production-ready AI agent skill for claude-code, gemini-cli, openai-codex. Preparing P&L statements, balance sheets, cash flow reports, board decks, or KPI dashboards.
Quick Facts
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Category | operations |
| Version | 0.1.0 |
| Platforms | claude-code, gemini-cli, openai-codex |
| License | MIT |
How to Install
- Make sure you have Node.js installed on your machine.
- Run the following command in your terminal:
npx skills add AbsolutelySkilled/AbsolutelySkilled --skill financial-reporting- The financial-reporting skill is now available in your AI coding agent (Claude Code, Gemini CLI, OpenAI Codex, etc.).
Overview
Financial reporting is the structured communication of a company's financial performance and position to stakeholders - from the board of directors to external investors. Done well, it builds trust, enables better decisions, and surfaces problems early. Done poorly, it creates confusion, erodes credibility, and obscures the actual health of the business.
This skill covers the three core financial statements, how to structure board and investor presentations, how to build KPI dashboards that match the audience, and how to write management commentary that tells the story behind the numbers.
Tags
financial-reporting p-and-l balance-sheet cash-flow board-decks
Platforms
- claude-code
- gemini-cli
- openai-codex
Related Skills
Pair financial-reporting with these complementary skills:
Frequently Asked Questions
What is financial-reporting?
Use this skill when preparing P&L statements, balance sheets, cash flow reports, board decks, or KPI dashboards. Triggers on financial statements, P&L, balance sheet, cash flow statement, board reporting, KPI dashboards, investor reporting, and any task requiring financial report preparation or presentation.
How do I install financial-reporting?
Run npx skills add AbsolutelySkilled/AbsolutelySkilled --skill financial-reporting in your terminal. The skill will be immediately available in your AI coding agent.
What AI agents support financial-reporting?
This skill works with claude-code, gemini-cli, openai-codex. Install it once and use it across any supported AI coding agent.
Maintainers
Generated from AbsolutelySkilled
SKILL.md
Financial Reporting
Financial reporting is the structured communication of a company's financial performance and position to stakeholders - from the board of directors to external investors. Done well, it builds trust, enables better decisions, and surfaces problems early. Done poorly, it creates confusion, erodes credibility, and obscures the actual health of the business.
This skill covers the three core financial statements, how to structure board and investor presentations, how to build KPI dashboards that match the audience, and how to write management commentary that tells the story behind the numbers.
When to use this skill
Trigger this skill when the user:
- Asks to prepare or review a P&L (income statement) for any period
- Needs to build or explain a balance sheet
- Wants to produce a cash flow statement (direct or indirect method)
- Is building a board deck or board pack for a leadership meeting
- Needs to create a KPI dashboard for executives, investors, or operators
- Wants to write management commentary or MD&A (management discussion and analysis)
- Is preparing an investor update, fundraising narrative, or LP report
- Needs guidance on reporting cadence, materiality thresholds, or GAAP vs IFRS
Do NOT trigger this skill for:
- Tax preparation or tax strategy (different regulatory domain - involves tax law)
- Audit procedures (auditor independence and audit standards are a separate discipline)
Key principles
Accuracy over aesthetics - A beautiful deck with wrong numbers destroys credibility. Reconcile every figure back to source data before formatting. Numbers must tie across all reports in the same package.
Audience-first framing - A board wants strategic signals and exception reporting. Operators want line-level variance details. Investors want growth and unit economics. Shape the same underlying data to the reader's decisions.
Variance always needs context - Never present a number without comparing it to budget, prior period, or forecast. The delta tells the story; the explanation of the delta tells the business story.
Materiality discipline - Not every line item deserves equal attention. Apply materiality thresholds (typically 5% of revenue or net income) to focus commentary on what actually matters to the decision being made.
Consistency enables trust - Use the same definitions, the same calculation methodology, and the same chart formats every period. Changing how you define gross margin mid-year, without explicit disclosure, signals something is being hidden.
Core concepts
The three financial statements and how they connect
Income Statement (P&L) - Measures performance over a period. Shows revenue, cost of goods sold, gross profit, operating expenses, EBITDA, and net income. The bottom line (net income) flows into retained earnings on the balance sheet.
Balance Sheet - A snapshot of what the company owns (assets), owes
(liabilities), and what's left for owners (equity) at a single point in time.
The fundamental equation: Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Retained earnings
accumulates all past net income minus dividends.
Cash Flow Statement - Explains the change in the cash balance between two balance sheet dates. Divided into three sections: operating (cash from running the business), investing (capex, acquisitions), and financing (debt, equity). Net income is not cash flow - the bridge between them is the operating section.
How they connect:
- Net income (P&L) -> increases retained earnings (balance sheet equity)
- Changes in working capital (balance sheet) -> appear in operating cash flow
- Depreciation (P&L non-cash expense) -> added back in operating cash flow
- Cash on the cash flow statement must equal cash on the balance sheet
GAAP vs IFRS basics
| Dimension | US GAAP | IFRS |
|---|---|---|
| Authority | FASB (Financial Accounting Standards Board) | IASB (International Accounting Standards Board) |
| Used in | United States | 140+ countries including EU, UK, Australia |
| Revenue recognition | ASC 606 (5-step model) | IFRS 15 (similar, some differences in licenses) |
| Inventory | LIFO permitted | LIFO prohibited |
| Development costs | Expensed as incurred | Capitalized when technically feasible |
| Presentation | More prescriptive | More principles-based |
For most startup and growth-stage reporting, the practical differences are minor. Flag the accounting standard being used on every financial package.
Reporting cadence
| Audience | Cadence | Depth |
|---|---|---|
| Board of directors | Monthly or quarterly | High-level KPIs + exceptions + forward-looking |
| Investors (VC/PE) | Monthly (early stage), quarterly (growth) | MRR/ARR, burn, runway, key metrics |
| Management team | Weekly or monthly | Full P&L + operational KPIs |
| External (public company) | Quarterly + annual (10-Q, 10-K) | Full audited statements + MD&A |
Materiality
A misstatement or omission is material if it would reasonably influence the decisions of a user of the financial statements. Practical thresholds:
- 5% of revenue - common threshold for P&L line items
- 0.5% of total assets - common for balance sheet items
- Qualitative materiality - even a small dollar amount is material if it involves fraud, regulatory breach, or related-party transactions
Common tasks
1. Prepare a P&L statement
Structure (top-down):
Revenue
- Product revenue
- Services revenue
= Total revenue
Cost of Revenue (COGS)
- Direct materials / hosting / fulfillment
= Gross Profit
Gross Margin % = Gross Profit / Revenue
Operating Expenses
- Sales & Marketing
- Research & Development
- General & Administrative
= Total OpEx
= EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation, Amortization)
- Depreciation & Amortization
= EBIT (Operating Income)
- Interest expense / income
- Tax provision
= Net IncomeProcess:
- Pull actuals from the GL (general ledger) for the period
- Map GL accounts to report line items using a chart of accounts mapping
- Populate budget and prior period columns for comparison
- Calculate variances ($ and %) for every line
- Flag variances exceeding materiality threshold for commentary
2. Prepare a balance sheet
Structure:
ASSETS
Current Assets
- Cash & equivalents
- Accounts receivable (net of allowances)
- Prepaid expenses & other current
Non-Current Assets
- Property, plant & equipment (net)
- Intangibles & goodwill
- Other long-term assets
= Total Assets
LIABILITIES
Current Liabilities
- Accounts payable
- Accrued liabilities
- Deferred revenue
- Current portion of long-term debt
Non-Current Liabilities
- Long-term debt
- Other non-current liabilities
= Total Liabilities
EQUITY
- Common stock & additional paid-in capital
- Retained earnings (accumulated deficit)
= Total Equity
Total Liabilities + Equity must equal Total Assets (the check)Verification: Always confirm the balance sheet balances before distributing. A balance sheet that doesn't balance indicates a posting error in the GL.
3. Prepare a cash flow statement - indirect method
The indirect method starts from net income and adjusts for non-cash items and working capital changes. It is the most common format for management reporting.
OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net Income
+ Depreciation & amortization (non-cash add-back)
+ Stock-based compensation (non-cash add-back)
- Increase in accounts receivable (use of cash)
+ Increase in accounts payable (source of cash)
+ Increase in deferred revenue (source of cash)
- Decrease in accrued liabilities (use of cash)
= Net Cash from Operating Activities
INVESTING ACTIVITIES
- Capital expenditures
- Acquisitions (net of cash acquired)
+ Proceeds from asset sales
= Net Cash from Investing Activities
FINANCING ACTIVITIES
+ Proceeds from debt
- Debt repayments
+ Proceeds from equity issuance
- Dividends paid
= Net Cash from Financing Activities
Net Change in Cash = Operating + Investing + Financing
Ending Cash = Beginning Cash + Net Change in Cash
(Ending cash must tie to balance sheet cash)4. Build a board deck - structure
Load references/board-deck-template.md for the full slide-by-slide guide.
Core sections every board deck needs:
- Executive summary - one slide, key metrics and narrative in 60 seconds
- Financial performance - P&L vs budget, cash position, runway
- Key metrics - 3-5 KPIs with trend lines
- Business updates - wins, risks, key decisions needed
- Outlook - updated forecast and assumptions
Keep the deck to 10-15 slides. Appendix for deep-dives. Board members read ahead; the meeting is for discussion, not recitation of slides.
5. Create KPI dashboards - metrics by audience
For the board / investors:
- ARR or MRR (with growth rate)
- Net Revenue Retention (NRR) or Net Dollar Retention
- Gross margin %
- Burn rate and runway (months)
- Headcount and headcount efficiency (ARR per employee)
For the CEO / management team:
- All board metrics plus operating KPIs
- Pipeline coverage and win rate
- CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) and LTV:CAC ratio
- Churn rate (logo and dollar)
- Product usage / activation metrics
For operators / department heads:
- Department-level P&L
- Team-specific OKRs and leading indicators
- Budget vs actual by cost center
- Hiring plan vs actuals
Dashboard design rules:
- One primary metric per section, supporting metrics beneath it
- Always show the trend, not just the point-in-time value
- Color code red/amber/green against target, with consistent thresholds
- Include the period and the data source on every chart
6. Write management commentary
Management commentary (also called MD&A in public filings) explains the numbers in plain language. Structure each section as:
- What happened - State the metric and its value vs comparison period
- Why it happened - The 1-3 drivers, quantified where possible
- What we're doing about it - Actions taken or planned (for misses)
Example (revenue section):
"Revenue of $4.2M in Q3 was $380K (10%) above budget, driven primarily by the early close of the Acme Enterprise deal ($220K) and stronger SMB cohort performance than modeled. The outperformance is partially offset by a $90K slip of the Globex renewal into Q4. We expect Q4 to benefit from Globex closing plus the newly-signed reseller agreement activated in October."
Avoid hedge words ("somewhat", "relatively", "challenging environment") that signal the author doesn't understand the numbers.
7. Prepare investor updates
Investor updates (monthly or quarterly) should be concise and consistent. Standard structure:
- Headline metric - ARR/MRR, growth rate, one-line narrative
- Highlights - 3-5 wins (named deals, product launches, hires)
- Lowlights - 2-3 honest problem areas. Investors notice if there are none.
- Key metrics table - Same metrics every period (MRR, ARR, churn, burn, runway, headcount)
- Asks - Specific, actionable requests for introductions or help
- Financials - P&L summary and cash position
Keep investor updates under two pages / 10 slides. Frequency builds trust; detail builds confusion.
Anti-patterns
| Anti-pattern | Why it's wrong | What to do instead |
|---|---|---|
| Non-GAAP metrics without reconciliation | Hiding GAAP losses behind adjusted EBITDA without showing the bridge erodes credibility with sophisticated investors | Always show the GAAP figure first, then reconcile to non-GAAP with each adjustment labeled |
| Changing metric definitions silently | Restating how gross margin is calculated without disclosure makes prior periods incomparable and looks like manipulation | Document all metric definitions in a "Definitions" appendix and disclose any methodology changes with a restatement |
| Presenting revenue without cohort context | Headline ARR growth can mask deteriorating retention - new logo growth covering up churn | Pair ARR with NRR and a cohort waterfall chart to show expansion vs contraction vs churn |
| Cash flow from operations confused with EBITDA | Companies present EBITDA as a proxy for cash generation but ignore working capital changes, capex, and debt service | Report free cash flow (Operating CF minus capex) alongside EBITDA and explain the bridge |
| Forecast always equals last month plus a constant | Straight-line forecasts ignore pipeline, seasonality, and known events and are not credible | Build forecasts from bottom-up: open pipeline by close probability + renewal base + expansion assumptions |
| Balance sheet omitted from board packs | Focusing only on the P&L misses cash conversion problems, rising payables, and covenant issues | Include a one-page balance sheet summary with working capital metrics in every board pack |
Gotchas
Net income does not equal cash flow - profitable companies run out of cash - A company can show strong net income while burning cash due to rising receivables, prepaid expenses, or inventory buildup. The cash flow statement's operating section is the only way to understand actual cash generation. Never report P&L to a board without also reporting cash position and runway.
Non-GAAP metrics without a clear reconciliation to GAAP erode investor trust - Presenting "Adjusted EBITDA" without showing the bridge from GAAP net income signals to sophisticated investors that GAAP results are being obscured. Always present GAAP first, then reconcile each adjustment line by line with a label.
Changing gross margin definition mid-year makes prior periods incomparable - If you reclassify customer success headcount from COGS to operating expenses, your gross margin improves immediately with no change in the business. Without explicit disclosure and restatement of prior periods, this looks like performance improvement when it is accounting reclassification.
Deferred revenue on the balance sheet is a liability, not cash equivalence - Deferred revenue (prepaid contracts not yet earned) shows up as a current liability. A growing deferred revenue balance is a positive signal (customers paying upfront), but it must be earned through service delivery. Never confuse deferred revenue balance with available cash.
Board decks that contain only highlights, no lowlights, destroy credibility - Experienced board members and investors expect problems in every business. A deck with only wins signals that management is either unaware of issues or hiding them. Proactively identify 2-3 honest problem areas and the mitigation plan in every board pack.
References
For detailed content on specific topics, read the relevant file from references/:
references/board-deck-template.md- Slide-by-slide board deck structure with annotated examples and presenter notes
Only load a references file if the current task requires deep detail on that topic.
References
board-deck-template.md
Board Deck Template
A board deck is a structured presentation given to a company's board of directors at a scheduled board meeting. Its purpose is to enable board members to fulfill their governance responsibilities: approving key decisions, identifying risks, and providing strategic guidance. The deck is not a progress report - it is a decision-support document.
This template covers a quarterly operating board deck for a growth-stage company. Adapt slide count and depth to your stage and board composition.
Before you build
Timing: Distribute the deck 48-72 hours before the meeting. Board members read it in advance; the meeting is for discussion, not narration of slides.
Length: 10-15 slides for the main deck. Move detailed financials, deep product analysis, and HR data to appendix sections. Board members will ask for them when relevant.
Format: One message per slide. Every slide has a headline that states the conclusion, not just the topic. Instead of "Revenue Q3" write "Q3 Revenue Beat Budget by 8% Driven by Enterprise Expansion".
Who prepares it: CFO owns the financial slides. CEO owns the narrative and business update slides. Functional leads (CTO, CMO, VP Sales) are responsible for their own sections but should align with the CEO on framing before it goes out.
Slide 1: Executive Summary (The "One-Pager")
Purpose: Board members who read only this slide should understand the quarter.
Contents:
- 3-5 headline KPIs for the period (ARR, revenue, burn, runway, headcount)
- One-sentence narrative on performance vs plan
- Top 3 highlights
- Top 2 risks / lowlights
- 1-2 decisions or asks from the board
Format tip: Use a two-column layout. Left column: metrics table. Right column: narrative bullets. Keep it scannable in under 60 seconds.
Example headline: "Strong Q3: Revenue and ARR ahead of plan; burn elevated due to planned engineering hires; Series B process on track for Q1 close."
Slide 2: Company Scorecard
Purpose: Consistent KPI view every quarter so board members can track trends without re-learning what to look at.
Contents (for a SaaS company):
| Metric | Q1 Actual | Q2 Actual | Q3 Actual | Q3 Budget | Q3 vs Budget |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ARR | |||||
| MRR Growth MoM | |||||
| Net Revenue Retention | |||||
| Gross Margin % | |||||
| Net Burn | |||||
| Runway (months) | |||||
| Headcount | |||||
| ARR per Employee |
Format tip: Color code the vs-budget column: green for on/above target, amber for within 10% miss, red for greater than 10% miss. Use the same threshold every quarter.
Presenter note: Do not read the table aloud. Open with: "The scorecard is in your pack. I'll call out two things that need discussion."
Slide 3: Revenue Performance
Purpose: Explain revenue in detail with the bridge from last quarter to this quarter.
Contents:
- Revenue waterfall chart: Opening ARR + New + Expansion - Churned - Contracted = Closing ARR
- Revenue vs budget bar chart with monthly breakdown
- Top 5 new logos (name, ACV, use case) if not commercially sensitive
- Notable expansions and notable churns with root cause for churn
Key metrics to show:
- New ARR by channel (direct, partner, PLG)
- NRR (net revenue retention) trend
- ACV (average contract value) trend
Presenter note: Lead with the headline number, then explain the ARR bridge. The bridge tells the story of how growth is being built and where it is leaking.
Slide 4: Financial Statements Summary
Purpose: Satisfy board governance requirement to review financial statements. Most boards include the CFO presenting actuals vs budget for the period.
Contents:
- P&L summary: Revenue, Gross Profit (with GM%), Total OpEx by department, EBITDA, Net Income
- Three columns: Actual, Budget, Prior Period
- Variance column in both $ and %
- Cash flow summary: Operating, Investing, Financing, Net change in cash
Format tip: Use a table, not a chart. Numbers need to be readable. Flag any line with a variance exceeding the materiality threshold in a different color.
Presenter note: CFO presents this section. Call out each material variance and give the one-sentence explanation. Pre-align with the CEO before the meeting on how to frame any material misses.
Slide 5: Cash Position and Runway
Purpose: The board needs to know how much time the company has and whether the burn trajectory is on plan.
Contents:
- Cash balance as of period end
- Monthly burn rate chart (last 6-12 months) with trend line
- Runway calculation: Cash / (Average monthly burn)
- Burn multiple: Net Burn / Net New ARR - lower is more efficient
- Forecast: Cash balance under base, upside, and downside scenarios
Key thresholds:
- Runway under 12 months: board should discuss fundraising options now
- Runway under 6 months: active fundraising must be underway
- Burn multiple above 2x: requires explanation of investment thesis
Presenter note: If runway is tight, do not bury it in appendix. Surface it here and come with a plan (cost reductions, bridge options, fundraising timeline). Boards dislike surprises; they dislike late surprises most of all.
Slide 6: Go-to-Market Performance
Purpose: Help the board understand pipeline health and sales efficiency.
Contents:
- Pipeline: Total pipeline by stage, coverage ratio (pipeline / quota)
- Win rate trend
- CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) and LTV:CAC ratio by channel
- Sales cycle length trend
- Marketing-sourced vs sales-sourced pipeline split
Format tip: Use a funnel chart for pipeline stages. Annotate with conversion rates at each stage. Drop in a trend sparkline for win rate so the board can see if it's improving or degrading.
Presenter note: This slide is often owned by the VP of Sales or CRO. Brief them to keep commentary to 3 minutes and focus on the largest variance from plan.
Slide 7: Product and Engineering Update
Purpose: Keep the board informed on product velocity and strategic bets.
Contents:
- 2-3 key features or milestones shipped in the period
- Impact of shipped work (usage metrics, conversion lift, NPS delta)
- Current sprint / quarter priorities (what is shipping next)
- Any significant technical debt decisions or platform changes
- Engineering headcount and hiring plan update
Format tip: Use a "Shipped / Shipping / Planned" three-column layout. Add one screenshot or metric for any major feature - it grounds the discussion.
Presenter note: Board members often push product teams on roadmap priorities. Prepare the CTO with 2-3 reasons why this quarter's choices were made over alternatives, tied to company strategy.
Slide 8: Team and Organization
Purpose: Board governance includes oversight of the executive team and organizational health.
Contents:
- Headcount by department vs plan (table)
- Key hires made in the period (name, role, start date)
- Open roles and time-to-fill trend
- Any executive team changes
- Attrition rate (voluntary) vs industry benchmark
Format tip: Keep this slide factual and brief. If there is a sensitive people situation (executive departure, team restructure), address it directly in the business update section before this slide - do not let the board discover it in a headcount table.
Slide 9: Risks and Issues
Purpose: Formal risk discussion is a board governance responsibility. This slide should surface the real risks, not just minor operational items.
Contents:
- Top 3-5 risks, each with: description, likelihood (H/M/L), impact (H/M/L), mitigation action
- Issues requiring board input or approval
- Any regulatory, legal, or compliance items
Format tip: Use a risk matrix (likelihood vs impact grid). Put each risk on the grid. Board attention should go to high-likelihood, high-impact risks.
Presenter note: This slide is where CEOs most often under-disclose. Board members know businesses have risks. They do not forgive CEOs who hid risks that materialized. Present each risk with the mitigation already framed.
Slide 10: Outlook and Asks
Purpose: Close the deck with forward-looking view and concrete asks so the board can add value.
Contents:
- Updated full-year forecast vs original plan (revenue, ARR, burn, runway)
- Key assumptions behind the forecast
- 1-3 specific asks: introductions, strategic advice, approval items
- Next board meeting date and key agenda items
Format tip: Show the forecast as a range (base case + upside + downside), not a single point estimate. Single-point forecasts communicate false precision and are almost always wrong.
Example asks:
- "We're evaluating two enterprise distribution partners - would welcome introductions to anyone who has worked with [Partner A] or [Partner B]."
- "Seeking approval for the proposed equity refresh pool of 2% before we begin the next executive search."
Appendix: Supporting Materials
Include these sections in the appendix. Reference them in the main deck but do not present them unless asked.
Appendix A: Full Financial Statements
- Complete P&L with all line items
- Full balance sheet
- Cash flow statement (indirect method)
- Budget vs actual for each month in the period
Appendix B: Cohort Analysis
- Monthly cohort retention table (12-month view)
- Revenue cohort waterfall
- Churn log: every churned customer with reason codes
Appendix C: Product Metrics
- DAU/MAU, activation rate, feature adoption
- NPS score and trend with verbatim highlights
Appendix D: Sales Pipeline Detail
- Opportunity list by stage and owner
- Deals closed this period
- Deals expected next period with close probability
Appendix E: Cap Table Summary
- Current ownership breakdown
- Dilution schedule by round
- Option pool status (authorized, issued, available)
Common board deck mistakes
| Mistake | Impact | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Slide headlines that describe topics, not conclusions | Board has to read the body to understand the point | Write every headline as a complete sentence stating the key takeaway |
| Missing the variance explanation | Board asks "why?" and CEO doesn't have a crisp answer | For every metric more than 5% off plan, prepare a one-sentence explanation before the meeting |
| No lowlights | Board stops trusting the deck; assumes problems are being hidden | Include 2-3 honest lowlights every period. It builds credibility |
| Deck distributed the morning of the meeting | Board members arrive unprepared; meeting becomes a read-along | Distribute 48-72 hours ahead. Add a one-page summary for the quick reader |
| Every number on every slide | Cognitive overload; board can't find the signal | Apply the rule of five: no more than 5 data points per slide in the main deck |
| Asks buried or absent | Board meeting ends without the CEO getting what they needed | Put asks on the last slide AND in the executive summary. Make them specific and actionable |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is financial-reporting?
Use this skill when preparing P&L statements, balance sheets, cash flow reports, board decks, or KPI dashboards. Triggers on financial statements, P&L, balance sheet, cash flow statement, board reporting, KPI dashboards, investor reporting, and any task requiring financial report preparation or presentation.
How do I install financial-reporting?
Run npx skills add AbsolutelySkilled/AbsolutelySkilled --skill financial-reporting in your terminal. The skill will be immediately available in your AI coding agent.
What AI agents support financial-reporting?
financial-reporting works with claude-code, gemini-cli, openai-codex. Install it once and use it across any supported AI coding agent.