Financial modeling involves using hypothetical variables in a formula to determine the likely impact on market behavior, profitability, or economic conditions. For example, it could be used to determine the effect of a 5% annual rise in crude oil costs on an airline's jet fuel costs over the next 5-7 years. A cash flow statement starts with net income and makes adjustments for items like depreciation, changes in working capital, and deferred taxes to arrive at cash flows from operating, investing, and financing activities. Working capital is current assets minus current liabilities and indicates how much cash is tied up in the short term. Financial forecasting involves predicting cost center expenses, monitoring against forecasts, and profit forecasting.
Financial modeling involves using hypothetical variables in a formula to determine the likely impact on market behavior, profitability, or economic conditions. For example, it could be used to determine the effect of a 5% annual rise in crude oil costs on an airline's jet fuel costs over the next 5-7 years. A cash flow statement starts with net income and makes adjustments for items like depreciation, changes in working capital, and deferred taxes to arrive at cash flows from operating, investing, and financing activities. Working capital is current assets minus current liabilities and indicates how much cash is tied up in the short term. Financial forecasting involves predicting cost center expenses, monitoring against forecasts, and profit forecasting.
Financial modeling involves using hypothetical variables in a formula to determine the likely impact on market behavior, profitability, or economic conditions. For example, it could be used to determine the effect of a 5% annual rise in crude oil costs on an airline's jet fuel costs over the next 5-7 years. A cash flow statement starts with net income and makes adjustments for items like depreciation, changes in working capital, and deferred taxes to arrive at cash flows from operating, investing, and financing activities. Working capital is current assets minus current liabilities and indicates how much cash is tied up in the short term. Financial forecasting involves predicting cost center expenses, monitoring against forecasts, and profit forecasting.
Financial modeling involves using hypothetical variables in a formula to determine the likely impact on market behavior, profitability, or economic conditions. For example, it could be used to determine the effect of a 5% annual rise in crude oil costs on an airline's jet fuel costs over the next 5-7 years. A cash flow statement starts with net income and makes adjustments for items like depreciation, changes in working capital, and deferred taxes to arrive at cash flows from operating, investing, and financing activities. Working capital is current assets minus current liabilities and indicates how much cash is tied up in the short term. Financial forecasting involves predicting cost center expenses, monitoring against forecasts, and profit forecasting.
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Finance Concepts
Question & Answers
Explain Financial Modeling Financial modeling is a quantitative analysis commonly used either for asset pricing or general corporate finance. Essentially, hypothetical variables are used in a formula to determine the likely impact on market behavior, profitability or economic conditions. Could be used to determine effect on jet fuel cost on airline as a result of 5% annual rise in the cost of crude oil over next 5 to 7 years. Walk me through a cash flow statement Start with net income, go line by line through major adjustments (depreciation, changes in working capital and deferred taxes) to arrive at cash flows from operating activities. Mention capital expenditures, asset sales, purchase of intangible assets, and purchase/sale of investment securities to arrive at cash flow from investing activities. Mention repurchase/issuance of debt and equity and paying out dividends to arrive at cash flow from financing activities. Adding cash flows from operations, cash flows from investments, and cash flows from financing gets you to total change of cash. Beginning-of-period cash balance plus change in cash allows you to arrive at end-of-period cash balance. Difference between costing and cost accounting Costing is a process of ascertaining cost whereas cost accounting is a process of recording various costs in a systematic manner in order to ascertain total cost. Opportunity Cost? Differential Cost? Is it possible for a company to show positive cash flows but be in grave trouble?
Absolutely. Two examples involve
unsustainable improvements in working capital (a company is selling off inventory and delaying payables), Another example involves lack of revenues going forward in the pipeline. Describe a financial report you have analyzed recently Demonstrate your ability to evaluate data. Mention the analysis you have done in your corporate finance paper. Ratio, Cash Flow, Decision tree etc. What is working capital Working capital is defined as current assets minus current liabilities; It tells the financial statement user how much cash is tied up in the business through items such as receivables and inventories. How much cash is going to be needed to pay off short term obligations in the next 12 months. What is financial forecasting
Forecasting of cost centre expenses.
Monitoring expenditure against forecasts. Profit forecasting. Budgeting (Different Budgets) What is composite cost of capital? Explain the process to compute it. Also known as weighted average cost of capital. Tells about component costs of common stock, preferred stock and debt. Each of these component is given a weight according to their proportion in the total capital. Weights summed together. Why are increases in accounts receivable a cash reduction on the cash flow statement?
Since our cash flow statement starts with net
income. An increase in accounts receivable is an adjustment to net income to reflect the fact that the company never actually received those funds. What is Capital Structure? The capital structure is how a firm finances its overall operations and growth by using different sources of funds. Debt comes in the form of bond issues or long-term notes payable, while equity is classified as common stock, preferred stock or retained earnings. Short-term such as working capital requirements is also considered to be part of the capital structure. Financial Vs Operational Risk Financial risk refers to a company's ability to manage its debt and financial leverage, While operational risk refers to the company's ability to generate sufficient revenue to cover its operational expenses. An alternate way of viewing the difference is to see financial risk as the risk that a company may default on its debt payments, And Operational risk as the risk that the company will be unable to function as a profitable enterprise. What is Goodwill Goodwill is an asset that captures excess of the purchase price over fair market value of an acquired business. Lets walk through the following example: Acquirer buys Target for $500m in cash. Target has 1 asset: PPE with book value of $100, debt of $50m, and equity of $50m = book value (A-L) of $50m. Fair Value = Book Value + Equity Goodwill = Purchase Price Fair Value I buy a piece of equipment, walk me through its impact on the 3 financial statements.
Initially there is no impact on income
statement. Initially there is no impact on Balance Sheet also. Cash outflow in cash flow statement. Later Depreciation Reduces income Reduces value of asset added back in cash flow statement. How is income statement linked to balance sheet? Net Income flows into retained earnings. What is deferred tax liability and why might one be created? Deferred tax liability is a tax expense amount reported on a companys income statement that is not actually paid to the Govt. in that time period, but is expected to be paid in the future. It arises because when a company actually pays less in taxes to the Govt. than they show as an expense on their income statement in a reporting period. Differences in depreciation expense between book reporting (GAAP) and Govt. reporting can lead to differences in income between the two, which ultimately leads to differences in tax expense reported in the financial statements and taxes payable to the Govt. What is a deferred tax asset and why might one be created? Deferred tax asset arises when a company actually pays more in taxes to the Govt. than they show as an expense on their income statement in a reporting period. Differences in revenue recognition, expense recognition, and net operating losses (NOLs) can create deferred tax assets. Questions to prepare yourself Describe the finance functions within a company and where you see yourself fitting. Whats a Price/Earning (P/E) ratio and how do you use it? What if 2 companies have the same value of P/E ratios, which company does you think is better? How would you explain net present value to non-finance major? What major factors drive mergers and acquisitions? What are the significant profile responsibilities of a finance analyst? Questions to prepare yourself What does it mean when cash flow from operations on a companys cash flow statement is negative? Is this bad news? If so, is it dangerous? Suppose that you constructed a pro forma balance sheet for a company and the estimate for external funding required was negative. How would you interpret this result? How will a decrease in financial leverage affect a companys cost of equity capital, if at all? Questions to prepare yourself If you want to assess the health of a company and you could choose between looking at 3 years of income statements or 3 years of balance sheets, which would you choose and why? What could a company do with excess cash on the balance sheet? What could a company do with excess cash on the balance sheet? Whats the difference between IRR, NPV and Payback? Questions to prepare yourself Lets say that I have a bond with a 5% coupon. What happens to the market price when the prevailing interest rates rise to 8%? How are the coupons affected? Which corporate bond would have a higher coupon, an AAA or a BBB? What are the annual payments received by the owner of a five year zero coupon bonds? Would you rather have Rs. 1 crore today or Re. 1 a day for the rest of your life? How would you go about valuing this amount?