In: Finance
To evaluate a firm’s accounting ability can conduct by 6 steps. Explain those steps!
Six Steps are :
1. Identify the industry economic characteristics
: First, determine a value chain analysis for the
industry—the chain of activities involved in the creation,
manufacture and distribution of the firm’s products and/or
services. Techniques such as Porter’s Five Forces or analysis of
economic attributes are typically used in this step.
2. Identify company strategies : Next, look at the
nature of the product/service being offered by the firm, including
the uniqueness of product, level of profit margins, creation of
brand loyalty and control of costs. Additionally, factors such as
supply chain integration, geographic diversification and industry
diversification should be considered.
3. Assess the quality of the firm’s financial statements
: Review the key financial statements within the context
of the relevant accounting standards. In examining balance sheet
accounts, issues such as recognition, valuation and classification
are keys to proper evaluation. The main question should be whether
this balance sheet is a complete representation of the firm’s
economic position. When evaluating the income statement, the main
point is to properly assess the quality of earnings as a complete
representation of the firm’s economic performance. Evaluation of
the statement of cash flows helps in understanding the impact of
the firm’s liquidity position from its operations, investments and
financial activities over the period—in essence, where funds came
from, where they went, and how the overall liquidity of the firm
was affected.
4. Analyze current profitability and risk : This
is the step where financial professionals can really add value in
the evaluation of the firm and its financial statements. The most
common analysis tools are key financial statement ratios relating
to liquidity, asset management, profitability, debt
management/coverage and risk/market valuation. With respect to
profitability, there are two broad questions to be asked: how
profitable are the operations of the firm relative to its
assets—independent of how the firm finances those assets—and how
profitable is the firm from the perspective of the equity
shareholders. It is also important to learn how to disaggregate
return measures into primary impact factors. Lastly, it is critical
to analyze any financial statement ratios in a comparative manner,
looking at the current ratios in relation to those from earlier
periods or relative to other firms or industry averages.
5. Prepare forecasted financial statements :
Although often challenging, financial professionals must make
reasonable assumptions about the future of the firm (and its
industry) and determine how these assumptions will impact both the
cash flows and the funding. This often takes the form of pro-forma
financial statements, based on techniques such as the percent of
sales approach.
6. Value the firm : While there are many valuation
approaches, the most common is a type of discounted cash flow
methodology. These cash flows could be in the form of projected
dividends, or more detailed techniques such as free cash flows to
either the equity holders or on enterprise basis. Other approaches
may include using relative valuation or accounting-based measures
such as economic value added.