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Lecture 3 - Accounting Analysis

The document outlines the steps involved in business analysis and accounting analysis, including understanding the business, analyzing financial information through accounting ratios and cash flows, assessing investment opportunities through valuation, and forecasting the profit and loss, balance sheet, and cash flows. It discusses how accounting analysis is important for understanding a company's financial statements and assessing the quality of their accounting information. The summary highlights key areas where accounting errors are more likely based on different industries.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
78 views

Lecture 3 - Accounting Analysis

The document outlines the steps involved in business analysis and accounting analysis, including understanding the business, analyzing financial information through accounting ratios and cash flows, assessing investment opportunities through valuation, and forecasting the profit and loss, balance sheet, and cash flows. It discusses how accounting analysis is important for understanding a company's financial statements and assessing the quality of their accounting information. The summary highlights key areas where accounting errors are more likely based on different industries.

Uploaded by

nope
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Accounting Analysis

The steps involved in Business Analysis


Step 5 – Application Step 4 – Prospective
for example: analysis: Valuation
•Outside Investor •RIM
Compare Value with Price to BUY,
SELL, or HOLD •Alternatives
•Inside Investor •Sensitivity
Compare Value with Cost to ACCEPT
or REJECT Strategy
Step 3 – Prospective
analysis: Forecasting
•Profit and Loss
•Balance Sheet
•Cash Flow

Step 1 – Understanding the Step 2 - Analyzing Information


Business – Accounting Analysis and
e.g.: Financial Analysis
•The Product market Strategy •Quality of Accounting
•The Competition information?
•The Regulatory Constraints •Re-formatting to uncover
business activities
•Business strategies
•Ratio and cash flow analysis

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Learning Objectives
At the conclusion of this lecture you should
understand:

Chapter 3:
1. The institutional framework of
accounting
2. Factors that influence accounting quality
3. The steps in accounting analysis
4. Accounting analysis pitfalls
5. The value of accounting information

Chapter 4:
6. How to implement accounting analysis

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Accounting Analysis
 Assess the degree to which the firm’s accounting reflects the
underlying business reality. Identify any accounting distortions
and evaluate their impact on profits and the sustainability of
profits.

 The importance of accounting analysis:


 Understanding accounting allows the business analyst to
more effectively use the financial information disclosed by
companies.
 In particular, the analyst is trying to assess the accounting
quality of the financial statements.
 Sound accounting analysis improves the reliability of
conclusions from financial analysis.
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From Lecture 1

22319 Financial Statement Analysis 5


From Lecture 1
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Prelude to An Accounting Quality Analysis

 Understand the business


 Understand the accounting policy
 Understand the business areas where accounting quality is most
doubtful
 Understand situations in which management are particularly
tempted to manipulate

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Types of Financial Statements
 According to the International Accounting Standards Board
(IASB), a ‘complete set of financial statements’ comprises:
 Statement of financial position as at the end of the period

 Statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income


for the period
 Statement of changes in equity for the period

 Statement of cash flows for the period

 Notes (comprising a summary of significant accounting


policies and other explanatory information).

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The Basic Features of Financial Reporting

 The basic features of financial reporting include:


 Accrual accounting

 Delegation of reporting to management

 Reporting standards

 External auditing.

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Accrual Accounting
 Financial reports are prepared using accrual accounting instead
of cash accounting.
 The conceptual framework defines the following financial
statement elements and their relation:
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
Profit = Revenues – Expenses
 Another important relation:
Comprehensive income = profit for the period + items
recognised directly in equity

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Delegation of Reporting to Management
 Management is responsible for the application of accounting
methods (recognition, measurement and disclosure) in financial
statements.
 Management have some discretion in the choice of accounting
policies and the estimates made in financial statements.
 Management can use this discretion in revealing their private
information about the firm or in distorting the accounting
numbers.
 Distortion of accounting may reflect incentives facing managers.

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Reporting Standards

 Accounting standards try to eliminate unsatisfactory reporting


practices, thereby promoting consistency and comparability.
 Many countries in the world are now reporting or converging to
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
 IFRS have been described as more principles-based (rather than
rules-based).

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External Auditing of Financial Statements

 Audits provide an independent (third party) opinion on the


quality of the financial statements.
 Audits are required for many companies, private and public.
 There is a move towards international auditing standards by
many countries.
 Audit committees enhance the auditing process.

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Factors Influencing Accounting Quality

 It is necessary to allow managers some discretion in applying


accounting standards.
 As a result, three potential sources of noise and bias in
accounting data include:
1. Random estimation errors
2. Rigidity in accounting rules
3. Manager’s accounting choices.

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Rigidity of Accounting Rules and
Random Forecast Errors
 Accounting standards may not reflect the economics of the
firm’s transactions.
 Some flexibility in accounting required.
 Management’s estimates may result in accounting forecasting
errors.
 Accrual accounting requires forecast estimates that can be
incorrect.

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Managers’ Accounting Choices

 Managers have a number of incentives to choose accounting


disclosures that are biased:
 Accounting-based debt covenants
 Management compensation contracts
 Contests for corporate control
 Tax considerations
 Regulatory considerations
 Capital market and stakeholder considerations
 Competitive considerations.

22319 Financial Statement Analysis 16


Industry Flash Point
Banking Credit losses: quality of loan loss provisions
Computer hardware Technological change: quality of receivables and inventory
Computer software Market ability of products: quality of capitalized r&d
Retailing Credit losses: quality of net accounts receivable
Inventory obsolescence: quality of carrying values of inventory
Rebate programs: quantity of sales and estimated liabilities

Manufacturing Warranties: quality of warranty liabilities

Flash Points:
Product liability: quality of estimated liabilities

Accounting Automobiles Overcapacity: quality of depreciation allowances

Areas where Telecommunications Technological change: quality of depreciation allowances

Error is More Equipment leasing Lease values: quality of carrying values for leases

Likely Tobacco Liabilities for health effects of smoking: quality of estimated


liabilities

Drugs R&D: quality of R&D expenditures


Product liability: quality of estimated liabilities

Airlines Frequent flier programs: estimated liabilities for travel awards


Real estate Property values: quality of carrying values for real property

Aircraft and ship Revenue recognition: quality of estimates under percentage of


manufacturing completion method and “program accounting”

Subscriber services Development of customer base: quality of capitalized promotion


costs
22319 Financial Statement Analysis Subscriptions paid in advance: quality of deferred revenue 17
Identify Earnings Management

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Steps in Accounting Analysis
 Step 1: Identify key accounting policies
 Key policies and estimates used to measure risks and critical
factors for success must be identified.

 Step 2: Assess Accounting Flexibility


 Accounting information is more open to distortion if
managers have a high degree of flexibility in choosing policies
and estimates.

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Steps in Accounting Analysis
 Step 3: Evaluate Accounting Strategy
 Flexibility in accounting choices allows managers to
strategically communicate economic information or distort
performance.
 Issues to consider include:
 Norms for accounting policies with industry peers

 Incentives for managers to manage earnings

 Changes in policies and estimates and the rationale for


doing so
 Whether transactions are structured to achieve certain
accounting objectives.

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Steps in Accounting Analysis
 Step 4: Evaluate the Quality of Disclosure
 Issues to consider include:
 Whether disclosures seem adequate
 Adequacy of footnotes to the financial statements
 Whether notes sufficiently explain and are consistent with
current performance
 Whether GAAP reflects or restricts the appropriate
measurement of key measures of success
 Adequacy of segment disclosure.

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Steps in Accounting Analysis
 Step 5: Identify Potential Red Flags
 Issues that warrant gathering more information include:
 Unexplained changes in accounting, especially when performance is
poor
 Unexplained transactions that boost profits

 Unusual increases in inventory or receivables in relation to sales revenue

 Increases in the gap between net income and cash flows or taxable
income
 Use of R&D partnerships, SPEs or the sale of receivables to finance
operations
 Unexpected large asset write-offs

 Large fourth-quarter adjustments

 Qualified audit opinions or auditor changes

 Related-party transactions.
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Flash Points: Institutional Situations Where
Manipulation is More Likely

 The firm is in the process of raising capital or renegotiating borrowing.


Watch public offerings
 Debt covenants are likely to be violated
 A management change
 An auditor change
 Management rewards (like bonuses) are tied to earnings
 A weak governance structure: inside management dominate the board;
there is a weak audit committee or none at all
 Transactions are with related parties rather than at arm's length
 Special events such as union negotiations
 The firm is "in play" as a takeover target
 Tax considerations
22319 Financial Statement Analysis 24
Steps in Accounting Analysis
 Step 6: Undo Accounting Distortions
 Financial statement footnotes often provide information from
which the analyst can undo accounting distortions or make
the financial statements more comparable.

22319 Financial Statement Analysis 25


IPOs and Manipulation

______________________________________________________________________________
Year of Year after IPO
Diagnostic (%) IPO 1 2 3 4 5 6
______________________________________________________________________________
Net income/sales 4.6 2.8 2.1 1.6 1.3 1.3 1.8
Abnormal accruals/book value 5.5 1.6 -0.4 -0.8 -2.0 -1.4 -2.7

Allowance for uncollectibles/gross


accounts receivable 2.91 3.32 3.46 3.62 3.81 3.77 3.85
_______________________________________________________________________________
Source: S. Teoh, T. Wong and G. Rao, "Are Accruals During An Initial Public Offering Opportunistic?" Review of
Accounting Studies, 1998.

22319 Financial Statement Analysis 26


Abnormal Returns to Quality Analysis

Source: R. Sloan, "Do Stock Prices Fully Reflect Information in Accruals and Cash Flows About Future Earnings?"
Accounting Review 71 (1996), p. 312.

22319 Financial Statement Analysis 27


Accounting Analysis
Misconceptions
 Conservative accounting is not
always ‘Good’ accounting.
 For example, historical cost
and accounting for intangible
assets.
 Not all unusual accounting
practices are questionable.
 Earnings management does
not necessarily motivate some
accounting phenomena that
seem unusual.

22319 Financial Statement Analysis 28


Concluding Comments

 Accounting analysis is an essential step in analysing corporate


financial reports.
 A methodology consisting of six steps in analysing accounting
data was presented.
 Research suggests earnings management is not so pervasive as to
make earnings data unreliable.
 The value of accounting information vs cash flows

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Conclusion
This week Next week
 Accounting analysis as a  Reformatting accounting
quality control process information
 ‘Understand’ the business
model and how this is
captured in the financial
reports

22319 Financial Statement Analysis 30

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