Financial Statement Analysis and Valuation - (B-BA-E-M) - Q4
Participation Prerequisites
The course builds on "International Financial Reporting I" and serves as an ideal counterpart to "Financial Valuation" for students enrolled into Master in Finance program.
Course Content
Stakeholders such as managers, shareholders, bankers and analysts rely on accounting information to understand, compare and forecast financial performance. This course provides the knowledge and skills to derive and interpret important metrics in assessing, comparing and forecasting financial performance in a capital markets setting. You will then learn how to transform these forecasts into estimates of company valuation by using equity and enterprise-based valuation techniques.
The course ‘Financial Statement Analysis & Valuation’ takes the user perspective of financial statements (investment analyst, portfolio manager and business analyst) as she interprets financial reports, analyses performance and prepares forecasts. We will start with a refresher on the role of financial reporting in market economies and the development of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). Next, we will review the key accounting concepts and the primary financial statements. Focus is on interpreting financial statements to forecast key value drivers such as earnings, cash flows and returns for equity valuation. We cover the intricacies of major valuation methodologies (Discounted Cash Flow, Residual Income Model and Valuation Multiples) as well as the concept of equity and enterprise value. Several well-known, large international companies will be used as cases to illustrate the practical aspects of financial analysis and valuation in capital markets.
Intended Learning Outcomes and Competencies
Objectives:
The objective of this course is to give student a solid understanding of the relevant disciplines of financial accounting and financial analysis for business valuation. Specific objectives and topics include:
Learning areas
Learning outcomes
I. Content-related
To become acquainted with financial reporting requirements and practices applied by global firms
To understand the limitations of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as a global accounting language
To appreciate the differences / similarities in the various valuation methodologies (Discounted Cash Flow, Residual Income Model and Valuation Multiples)
II. Skills-related
To apply the basic tools in analyzing financial statements
To become savvy in analyzing, interpreting and forecasting information in financial statements.
To become a knowledgeable communicator in financial reporting; the language of business
To obtain exposure to, and familiarity with, the financial statements of real companies
To interpret the communication between company and financial markets on financial performance, forecasts and valuation
III. Attitude-related
To critically review a firm’s key performance metrics within an industry context
To question financial reporting requirements and firms reporting practices
To appreciate the role of judgment in financial accounting and analysis
Instruction Type
Attendance study programme
Form of Examination
| Form of Assessment | Weighting (in %) |
Duration of written exam in minutes |
| Written Exam | ||
| Oral Examination | - | |
| Written Work (Individual) | - | |
| Written Work (Group) | - | |
| Presentation (Individual) | - | |
| Presentation (Group) | - | |
| Business Simulation | - | |
| Class Participation | - | |
| Answer-Choice-Exam | - | |
| Other assessment format (please specify): | - |
Literature
Study materials:
- The course will involve articles, cases and excel files that will be made available.
- Useful reference book is ‘Valuation’ by Koller, Goedhart and Wessels (6th or 7th Edition).
Next events
No current events available!
| 1/8 | Elective | Mo, 09.03.2026 | 15:30 Uhr | 18:45 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
| 2/8 | Elective | Tu, 10.03.2026 | 08:00 Uhr | 11:15 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
| 3/8 | Elective | Mo, 16.03.2026 | 15:30 Uhr | 18:45 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
| 4/8 | Elective | Tu, 17.03.2026 | 08:00 Uhr | 11:15 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
| 5/8 | Elective | Mo, 23.03.2026 | 15:30 Uhr | 18:45 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
| 6/8 | Elective | Tu, 24.03.2026 | 08:00 Uhr | 11:15 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
| 7/8 | Elective | Mo, 30.03.2026 | 15:30 Uhr | 18:45 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
| 8/8 | Elective | Tu, 31.03.2026 | 08:00 Uhr | 09:30 Uhr | G-003 Prof. Horst Albach Hörsaal / Lecture Hall |
Lecturers
Indicative Student Workload
| Self-Study | 118 h |
| Contact Time | 30 h |
| Examination | 2 h |