| Date | 11-12 Sept |
|---|---|
| Times | 09:30 - 17:30 |
| Cost | £1125.00 + VAT (£1350.00) |
| SRA CPD Hours | 12 |
This course will teach participants how to construct a financial forecast of any industrial company. Attention is paid both to isolating the business drivers and ensuring that assumptions and results pass reality checks, and to the mechanics of proper treatment of fixed assets, working capital requirements, provisions, equity capital requirements, and the allocation of net cash flows between long term debt, short term debt, and cash.
All required accounting principles are explained as encountered, and only a basic familiarity with spreadsheets is assumed.
Teaching method
Over the course of the two days participantss will build a fully integrated financial forecast – profit and loss account, cash flow statement and balance sheet – for a case company.
The training process is an alternation between discussion of the relevant issues and supervised production of a model and interpretation of its conclusions.
Participants will receive the final version which is a template that can be readily converted to meet their future corporate modelling requirements.
Participants will be required to bring a laptop with Excel loaded to the course.
Day one
General introduction
Participants review spreadsheet model outline and structure
Populating the history
Participants discuss and enter historical financials for target company
Operating drivers
Participants discuss forecast drivers for target company and project revenue and EBIT or EBITDA for the group or company
Modelling fixed assets
Participants model property, plant and equipment and intangible assets, calculate fixed asset turns, and assess realism of capital expenditure projections
Modelling working capital
Participants calculate historical working capital requirements for target company, discuss forecast drivers, and project balance sheet items and annual movements in working capital
Modelling provisions
Participants project deferred tax, pension and restructuring provisions for the target company and discuss differences between their drivers and likely forecast assumptions
Day two
Associates
Participants project profits, dividends and book values for associated companies, and discuss how these line items are reflected in consolidated accounts
Minorities
The distinction is drawn between disparate minority interests and a single large minority interest, and the implied treatment of each.
Participants project profits, dividends and book values for minorities, and discuss their connection to group financial statements
Shareholders’ funds
Participants model simple accrual of retentions and then add a routine to permit capital increases or decreases
Cash flow statement
Participants connect cash flows down to change in net debt
Net debt
Participants allocate net cash flow between long and short term debt and cash
Closing the model
Participants connect and check balance sheets, take interest charges to the profit and loss, and produce and interpret resulting ratios, for various scenarios
Delivering this course in-house for you to a number of participants could be very cost effective. Please call us on 020 7387 4484 to discuss this further.
If you have any questions about this seminar please write to us at post@redcliffetraining.co.uk.
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Contact us if you are looking to book multiple participants as we offer discounts as follows: