SOLUTIONS TO EXERCISES AND CASES For FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS AND SECURITY VALUATION Stephen H. Penman Fifth Edition CHAPTER ONE Introduction to Investing and Valuation Exercises Drill Exercises E1.1. Calculating Enterprise Value This exercise tests the understanding of the basic value relation: Enterprise Value = Value of Debt + Value of Equity Enterprise Value = $600 + $1,200 million = $1,800 million (Enterprise
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Midterm Study Guide Fin 5170 Fall 2009 The exam will consist on multiple choices, and problems and may be an essay question. I will ask a maximum of two questions taken from the following material covered in class: Chapter 1 • Describe the concept of agency problems and different ways to ameliorate agency problems in a corporation Chapter 3 • Example 3.7 (pages 65-66) • Use the concept of arbitrage to explain the price of Security A in table 3.8, and Security B in table
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Financial Accounting Theory Chapter 8 – Summary The Positive Theory of Accounting 8.1 Outline In the text, Scott defines Positive accounting theory (PAT) as: “concerned with predicting such actions as the choices of accounting policies by firms and how firms will respond to proposed new accounting standards.” (263) PAT uses theory to predict the choices that management will make regarding their choice of accounting policies. This theory is introduced as a way to merge efficient securities
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CHAPTER 4 AUDIT EVIDENCE AND AUDIT DOCUMENTATION Answers to Review Questions 4-1 Auditors typically divide the financial statements into components or segments in order to make the audit more manageable. A component can be a financial statement account or a business (transaction) process. This approach allows the auditor to gather evidence by examining the processing of related transactions through the accounting system from their origin to their ultimate disposition in the accounting journals
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Chapter Four Professional Accounting in the Public Interest, Post-Enron Purpose of the Chapter When the Enron, Arthur Andersen, and WorldCom debacles triggered the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX), a new era of stakeholder expectations was crystallized for the business world and particularly for the professional accountants that serve in it. The drift away from the professional accountant’s role as a fiduciary to that of a businessperson was called into question and reversed. The principles
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3 711 Chapter Tax Accounting TRUE-FALSE QUESTIONSCHAPTER 13 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. A partnership may adopt any tax year without IRS permission. A corporation ling its rst return must annualize its income if the tax period is less than 12 months. A taxable year may be as short as one day and may exceed 366 days. Under no circumstances may a corporation change its scal year without IRS permission. A taxpayer engaged in two or more separate and distinct businesses
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Chapter 1—AIS overview (3 Questions = 4.5 points) Purpose of/value provided by AIS 1. Improving the quality and reducing the costs of products or service 2. Improve efficiency and effectiveness of the value chain and supply chain 3. Share knowledge 4. Improve the internal control structure 5. Improve decision making Key Role if the AIS 1. Collecting and storing data 2. Providing information for decisions 3. Safeguarding assets Value Chain Activities
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Financial Accounting: Basic Accounting Concepts: (The Income Statement) This chapter introduces the idea of income as used in financial accounting, and describes the income statement. Course of discussion outline: The last six basic concepts namely the following: 6. Time period 7. Conservatism 8. Realization 9. Matching 10. Consistency 11. Materiality The nature of income Now let us first differentiate the balance sheet and income statement, balance sheet described were which
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Chapter 1 The Financial Manager and the Firm Learning Objectives 1. Identify the key financial decisions facing the financial manager of any business firm. 2. Identify the basic forms of business organization used in the United States, and review their respective strengths and weaknesses. 3. Describe the typical organization of the financial function in a large corporation. 4. Explain why maximizing the current value of the firm’s stock price is the appropriate goal for management
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by President Bush in 2002. This Act was in direct response to the accounting scandals of the early 2000s. A time that I remember very well, because I’d just graduated from college into the accounting industry, and it was in a total uproar. The Sarbanes Oxley Act (SOX) ordered a number of reforms to enhance corporate responsibility, financial disclosure, and to fight corporate and accounting fraud. This regulation also put financial as well as criminal pressure on the perpetrators, including the auditors
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