Session 1 With Notes
Session 1 With Notes
Session 1 With Notes
Managerial Accounting
September 2022
1
Introduction
2
Purpose of Business
3
What does a business do to create value?
4
Who are the stakeholders of a business?
Employees
• Employees
• Management
• Competitors
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Governments
• Investors
• Shareholders
• The community
5
What do stakeholders need?
User group Informational Need - Value from the business
Employees Job security, salary negotiations
Management Understand performance and position
Competitors Assess competitiveness – margins, business model
Customers Financial Stability – continued service
Suppliers Credit worthiness – ability to pay
Governments Policy development, Taxes
Investors Risk – ability to repay plus interest
Shareholders Increase in value – dividends, profits
The community Impact of society and the environment
6
Can accounting help with stakeholder
informational needs?
Financial transactions are actions that involve the inflow or outflow of cash in the
business
These are the impact of the activities undertaken by the business
7
Types of Accounting
• Financial accounting – focused on external reporting,
principally to the providers of capital
8
Luca
Paciolo
1494 Summa Arithmetica
9
in Italy and elsewhere and gradually the Venetian method described by
Pacioli became the international standard for books of account
9
The primary purpose of financial accounting
10
Providers of capital need to know
• has the firm generated attractive returns on the capital invested (and
will it continue) ?
• has the firm generated sufficient cash flows to pay obligations and
replenish its assets (will it be able to in the future) ?
11
Financial Statement and capital providers
Debt Investors
Financial Company
Statements Management
Equity Investors
12
Financial Statement and capital providers
Capital
Interest + Principal
Debt Investors
Financial Company
Statements Management
Equity Investors
Debt investors lend capital to companies that are able to repay the loan as well as pay
interest through the loan period. Debt holders have to evaluate risk in determining
whether to make such an investment.
Note there is another group of capital providers – suppliers. They too have to evaluate
the risk of supplying goods and services to the firm for which they do not require an
interest payment
13
Financial Statement and capital providers
Loan Agreement
Capital
Interest + Principal
Debt Investors
Financial Company
Statements Management
Equity Investors
Debt investors lend capital to companies that are able to repay the loan as well as pay
interest through the loan period. Debt holders have to evaluate risk in determining
whether to make such an investment.
To minimise or contain future risk loan agreements often contain covenants. Below are a
selection of covenants, but note loan agreements are drafted with specific conditions
depending the situation.
Positive/affirmative loan covenants are conditions that borrowers must fulfill in order
to keep receiving funds.
1) Required to report on cash flow and/or profit on a regular basis which is often more
regular than the annual accounts.
2) Maintain adequate insurances
3) Maintain the business in good standing in the country
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6) Prevention of the sale of assets without the lender’s permission
7) Maintenance of a specific or targeted interest cover ratio
Financial Loan Covenants - Certain financial loan covenants may be used to restrict the
amount of credit the business can access from its line of credit.
1) Current Ratio (Current Assets divided by Current Liabilities)
2) Borrowing base calculation with a defined maximum percentage. The borrowing
base is the total of all eligible assets that could be used as collateral for accessing
additional lines of credits
Note there is another group of capital providers – suppliers. They too have to evaluate
the risk of supplying goods and services to the firm for which they do not require an
interest payment
14
Financial Statement and capital providers
Loan Agreement Capital
Interest + Principal
Debt Investors
Financial Company
Statements Management
Equity Investors
Dividends
The owners of the company are given a dividend as compensation for the equity
investment. Dividend policy is important in maintaining the share price. To decrease or
not pay dividends gives a negative signal to the market. This is not a cost of doing
business in the same way as paying debt investors in that it is a distribution of the firms
excess returns.
15
Financial Statement and capital providers
Capital
Interest + Principal
Debt Investors
Financial Company
Statements Management
Equity Investors
Dividends
Capital
Attest
Audit fee
Independent
Auditors
Independent auditors are appointed by the company’s management to audit and sign-
off on the financial statements annually.
The auditors will test the systems in place for robustness and consistency. This will help
them understand that financial transactions are recorded consistently. They further
assess the way transaction are presented to ensure the are compliant with current laws
and applicable accounting standards.
E&Y (formally known as Ernst & Young) is preparing to split it’s audit business from it’s
management consulting business to prevent conflicts of interest.
In some jurisdictions financial regulators have insisted that auditors must be changed
after 5 years, this is to prevent auditors from being too close to the management and
not performing their duties correctly just to keep the business. E&Y failed to notice
Wirecard’s fraud.
Note auditors are not engaged to detect on fraud
16
Burberry
17
Reporting to Shareholders
Shareholders
Principal Committees
Independent
Board of Directors Audit Committee
Auditors
Nomination
Committee
Audit fee
Remuneration
Company Committee
Management
The board of directors represent (are agents of) the shareholders. The Board is
comprised of executive directors (directors that actively managing a part of the
business) and Non-executive directors (NED’s) that offer independent advice to the
Board.
Advising the Board are three main committees. The structure of governance differs
between companies and there may be other committees advising the Board.
The Audit committee - provide oversight of the financial reporting process, the
audit process, the company’s system of internal controls and compliance with
laws and regulations.
They appoint the auditors. They will oversee review significant accounting and
reporting issues and recent professional and regulatory pronouncements to
understand the potential impact on financial statements. They should be
assessing the completeness and accuracy of the financial reporting both external
and internal.
The Nomination committee that proposes new members to the Board, non-executives
(NED’s) or a new chairperson.
18
for the executive directors and senior management. As well as the Chairperson of the
Board
18
Burberry
19
Principal Financial Statements
IS: a statement covering a period of time – quarter, six months, full year and captures all
the activities associated with the value proposition – the revenue earned from the offer,
the cost of the offer, the delivery, selling and administration costs
BS: captures the capacity of the business – all the resources, both fixed capital and
working capital at a point in time which is the end date of the period covered by the IS
and CFS
SCF: shows the changes in the cash (bank) balances from the last period end to current
period end
Note – the Notes to the Financial Statements are an integral part of the financial
reporting and therefore fundamental in understanding the statements
20
What are the fundamental activities of a
business?
21
Business activities are described in the financial statements
Income Balance
Statement Sheet
22
Financial Statements
Example: Example:
31 December 31 December
2020 2021
Opening Closing
Balance Balance
sheet sheet
23
How does accounting view the business?
Key concepts
• Entity
• Monetary units
• Periodic
Entity – reporting should be separate from other organisations. In the case of groups
each company has its own set of accounts which can then be consolidated.
Monetary – transactions are recorded in currency units, the functional currency is that
of where the company operates and the reporting currency is normally where the
company is based and reports. This means that some currencies will be translated into
the reporting currency.
Periodicity – companies are obligated to report at least once a year. Companies listed on
a stock exchange will have report more often. In Europe companies prepare an interim
report (an unaudited 6 month report – first half of the year) and an annual report
(audited); in the US companies will file unaudited reports every quarter (10Q) and a full
year audited report (10K)
Historic costs – financial transactions are recorded at the time and therefore are historic
in nature. This means the values recorded are reliable, because they can be traced to the
original purchase. However, over time these values are less relevant to decision makers.
There are provisions within international financial reporting standards that the original
values recorded can revalued to fair values, current values or value in use.
This uses a revaluation account which is included in the equity section of the balance
sheet. Since any change in assets or liabilities impacts shareholders.
24
Fundamental assumptions:
25
An accrual is the recording of a financial transaction before the cash has been received
or paid.
Accruals are made in order to calculate the performance, it is important to include all
revenues and expenses in the accounts
- Matching concept
Going concern – the ability of a company to settle obligations as they fall due in the
foreseeable future. The foreseeable future is not defined, but one could use to the end
of the next accounting period.
If a company is not a going concern then it will have to liquidate assets in order to pay
debts. This inevitably will mean the selling of assets at a lower value than the company
has them recorded.
A company may become not a going concern because of various factors such as the
collapse of a market or a downturn in the economy
25
Source of financial accounting rules
• Legislation
• Accounting standards
26
Accounting standards
Recognition/Derecognition:
- when an item is regarded as an asset, liability, equity, revenue or expense
Measurement:
- historic cost [original transaction price less impairment charges]
- current value [fair value, value-in-use and current cost]
Disclosure:
- the IASB Conceptual framework guides the general presentation [income
statement versus other comprehensive income] and minimum level of
disclosure – hence the importance of the notes in the annual report
27
Financial Reporting Standards
Covers the issues of recognising, measuring and reporting the
financial transactions of international businesses.
In the European Union we have EFRAG, European Financial Reporting Advisory Group
that ratifies the use of IFRS
28
Why have international standards?
29
Business models
• the transformation of input capitals
through business activities to create
outputs which are measured by
outcomes
Financial capital: lines of credit, cash reserves, ability to access finance, collateral assets
etc
Manufactured capital: anything man made – buildings, plant, machinery, ICT, inventory
etc
Human capital: talented people capable of collaborating to create value
Intellectual capital: knowledge, patents, franchises, licences etc
Relationship capital: networks of customers, suppliers, collaborators etc
Natural capital: use or access to land, air, water. Eg water ways or canals for
transportation or water for cooling or irrigation
30
How Illy describes its business model
31
Business models
32
Which company?
33