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The use and application of accounting information to financial problems.
In terms of specific learning objectives, students, by the end of the course, will be able to:1. Recast company financial reports (income statement, balance sheet etc.) in a standard form so that the reports of different companies can be directly compared with each other or the reports of one company can be compared over time.2. Reconstitute the financial reports of companies to reverse the effects of (perhaps misleading) company accounting policy decisions.3. Forecast company funding needs from pro-forma balance sheets and income statements via the Additional Funds Needed model.4. Value the equity of a company using a present value method that takes information directly from the company’s financial reports.5. Employ the Black-Scholes option pricing model to value a range of investment projects of various types (projects where the choices to delay, extend or, even in the future, abandon all have a calculable value).6. Perform a diagnosis as to whether a company is entering (or is in) a state of financial distress, employing several different techniques (Altman’s Z-score, Argenti’s balanced scorecard, the Black-Scholes option pricing model applied to real options).
FINC201 and FINC203
FINC394 and AFIS314
Warwick Anderson
Palepu, Healy, Wright, Bradbury, and Lee; Business Analysis and Valuation: Using Financial Statements, Texts & Cases ; Second Asia-Pacific Edition; Cengage- Australia, 2015.
Course Outline
Domestic fee $775.00
International fee $3,188.00
* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.
For further information see Department of Economics and Finance .