This course aims to provide students who aspire to become future business leaders, such as entrepreneurs and professional investors, with the knowledge of how to effectively communicate business value creation using financial statements.
The primary objective of any business is to create value for its stakeholders, and financial statements are a vital source of information about business performance and status. Accordingly, this course is designed to develop a framework for linking firms' value creation to their financial statements.
We cover the following three topics:
1. Review of financial statement analysis
We review (1) how financial statements reflect firms' underlying economic value and value creation; (2) how to construct a financial statement-based value indicator, return-on-investment-capital (ROIC), and its components, and (3) how to link ROIC to value creation.
2. Theory of accounting-based valuation models and applications
We learn the theoretical motivation of two accounting-based valuation models: (1) Residual Income Model (RIM) and (2) Abnormal Earnings Growth Model (AEGM). We start with a comparison to the Discount Cash Flow Model (DCF) and discuss the relative advantages of the accounting-based models.
Then, we apply the accounting-based valuation models to cases. We actively discuss how business value creation processes are reflected in the different components and the assumptions of the accounting-based valuation models.
3. Issues in Valuations
Suppose the accounting measurement does not reflect the underlying economics. In that case, accounting-based value indicators are poor indicators of value creation, and calculations based on the accounting-based model will give us a biased and inaccurate valuation.
In these sessions, we study business cases for identifying the challenges in accounting measurements of the underlying economic nature of business transactions and evaluating different measurements.
Then, we address (1) forecasting future earnings, (2) terminal value assumption, and (3) sensitivity analysis.