100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Financial Statement Analysis & Valuation

Rating
-
Sold
3
Pages
22
Uploaded on
26-03-2022
Written in
2021/2022

Samenvatting van alle lectures van Financial Statement Analysis & Valuation, plus uitwerking van een aantal theoretische tentamenvragen. Summary of all lectures of Financial Statement Analysis & Valuation, plus some elaborations of theoretical exam questions.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Connected book

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Summarized whole book?
Yes
Uploaded on
March 26, 2022
Number of pages
22
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Inhoud
Financial Statement Analysis & Valuation.......................................................................................................................1
Lecture 1...................................................................................................................................................................... 2
Lecture 2...................................................................................................................................................................... 5
Lecture 3.................................................................................................................................................................... 10
Lecture 4.................................................................................................................................................................... 13
Lecture 5.................................................................................................................................................................... 15
Lecture 6.................................................................................................................................................................... 16




Financial Statement Analysis & Valuation

1

,Lecture 1

Introduction to financial statements
Who use financial statements?
 Managers: to monitor and evaluate performance; to communicate with external stakeholders; and to
understand what changes to make in their operating and financial policies;
 Bankers: to decide on the terms of a loan;
 Analysts: to forecast performance and value the company.

Introduction to valuation
How do we determine the valuation of a company an a share of its equity?
In the long run, common shareholders care about receiving a return on their investments. Either a constant periodic
pay off (ex. cash dividend) and/or the ability to liquidate the investment at a higher price.

Discounted Dividend Model (DDM): the value of the investment in the equity of a company is determined by the
present value of all the future expected dividends.

¿1 ¿2 ¿t
V share
0 = +
(1+r e ) (1+r e )2
+…= ∑ t
t=1 ( 1+r e )



Discounted Cash Flow (DCF): a common way to express the value of a common share.
FCF 1 FCF 2 ∞
FCF t
V
share
0 = +
(1+r wacc) (1+r wacc )2
+ …= ∑ t
debt
−V 0
t =1 ( 1+r wacc )

Where :
FCF=free cash flow =operating cash flow−cash invested ∈operations
wacc=weigthed average cost of capital
debt '
V 0 =the value of the fir m s debt

Value ≠ stock price! Stock price is based on market supply and demand.

What are the steps of financial statement analysis?
1) Business and strategy analysis: what are the company’s primary business, key profit divers, and risk areas?
2) Accounting analysis: do the financial statements accurately reflect the underlying business?
3) Financial (ratio) analysis: what factors drive current performance and how sustainable is this performance?
4) Prospective analysis: how will the company perform in the next years and how does this map into its valuation?

Which features of financial reporting should the analyst keep in mind?
 Accrual accounting: financial statements are based on accrual accounting. An accounting method where revenue
or expenses are recorded when a transaction occurs rather than when payment is received or made (cash
accounting);
 Management discretion: managers are responsible for financial reporting and entrusted with making key
estimates and assumptions. Manager discretion can add valuable inside information, but could also lead to
distortions;
 Trade off between relevance and reliability in accounting standards: information about some benefits or cost
can be highly relevant, but might not be reflected in the financial statement because they are too difficult to
measure reliably.




Business and strategy analysis
Why is it important to know the company’s primary business, key profit drivers, and risk areas?
Because this information is essential for our understanding of the accounting, because they affect the primary
balance sheet and income statement items that we should evaluate in the accounting analysis.
2

, Accounting analysis
Why should we adjust distortions in the financial statements?
 Because our analysis of ratios (in the financial analysis) needs to be based on informative numbers;
 Our forecasting exercise should be based on a clear understanding of how sustainable the numbers are.

Where does distortion in financial statement numbers come from?
 The imperfection of accounting rules: ex. valuable R&D activities are not reflected in the balance sheet;
 Forecast errors: managers cannot predict the future in a perfect way;
 Earnings management: managers might use their flexibility in making estimates and assumptions to produce
earning numbers that meet internal (ex. bonus) or external (ex. analyst/stock market) targets.

When financial statements are distorted due to managers’ incentives to misreport, how does this distortion typically
come about?
In the overly aggressive recognition of revenues, for example recognizing revenue of fake sales; understatements of
deferred revenue balances; or understatements of product return allowances.

What is channel stuffing?
A company selling more products than needed to a distributor to make the sales look good, while if the distributor
will not sell all products and is allowed to send back the products in the next period. This makes the sales of the
current period look better, while the next period will look worse. This is used to meet goals.

What is a balance sheet approach to adjusting distortions?
Focussing on identifying distortions in assets, liabilities and equity.

Why do we use a balance sheet approach when adjusting distortions?
Because of double-entry bookkeeping, we know that distortions in the income statement also have an effect on the
balance sheet. By adjusting the balance sheet, adjustments to the income statement follow automatically.

How is income tax expense affected by adjusting distortions?
If we adjust the book values in the financial reporting, the gap between tax expense and tax payable changes. We
should account for ‘’deferred taxes’’.

Why is there a gap between tax expense and tax payable?
Because tax expense = “tax rate x pretax book profits” and tax payable = “tax rate x pretax taxable profits”. These
may not be equal.

What is cookie-jar accounting?
Managing earning by overstating expenses in one period, and the reversing part or all of the overstatement in future
periods.




Accounting adjustments example
In this example we look at the accelerated recognition of revenues by a UK-based company, which recognizes
revenue from recruiting medical specialists and placing them at health and social care providers. They recognize

3
$3.60
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached


Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
BramNorder Universiteit van Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1546
Member since
8 year
Number of followers
1120
Documents
10
Last sold
1 day ago
Accountancy samenvattingen van hoge kwaliteit!

Hallo allemaal! Mijn naam is Bram, een 27 jarige student, die Master Accountancy and Control studeert aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam. Hiervoor heb ik HBO Accountancy gestudeerd aan Hogeschool Inholland. Graag deel ik mijn samenvattingen met jullie! Mijn samenvattingen zijn zo uitgebreid en duidelijk mogelijk. Om dit te realiseren stop ik veel tijd en energie in het maken van mijn samenvattingen. Mijn doel is dat jij door middel van mijn samenvatting jouw toets afsluit met een voldoende. Toch niet tevreden? Dan hoor ik graag wat ik kan verbeteren. Veel succes met je studie!

Read more Read less
3.9

213 reviews

5
76
4
76
3
42
2
8
1
11

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions