Accountants often need basic business valuation knowledge and skills to assist their clients or employers. This course provides practical insight into business valuation. You will learn about and apply various valuation tools such as the capitalized cash flow (CCF) approach and the discounted cash flow (DCF) approach to business case studies. It also focuses on business valuation interpretation and the mechanics of the valuation process under an asset approach, income approach, and market approach. Accountants often need basic business valuation knowledge and skills to assist their clients or employers. This course provides you with the basic tools for approaching a business valuation. Whether you are assessing the reasonability of a transaction (e.g. a market transaction or a tax initiated process) or providing advice on a potential transaction, this course will provide you with the basic knowledge of what to look for, and where to be cautious. It will also provide you with a means of triangulating valuation conclusions in order to cross-check preliminary findings. The course utilizes a detailed case study that builds upon itself for each module that allows for practical application.
Course Content:
In this course, you will gain knowledge about the following topics:
Overview and application of valuation methodologies, including income approaches, market approaches, and asset approaches
CCF and DCF valuation techniques and their application
The calculation of maintainable earnings
The determination of capitalization and discount rates
A comparison of enterprise value and equity value
Market valuation approaches using equity value and enterprise value multiples
Learning Objectives:
Upon completing this course, you should be able to:
Assess when to value the assets of a company individually versus when to value an enterprise as a whole
Create a bridge between enterprise value and equity value, including the impacts of redundant assets and debt-like items, as part of a valuation exercise
Calculate the cost of capital for a company, including cost of equity, cost of debt, and the weighted average cost of capital, when formulating discount rates
Ascertain relevance between a subject company to value, comparable public companies, and precedent transactions when triangulating value in a secondary approach
Utilize the basics concepts of specific valuation standards in a mock valuation engagement
Who Will Benefit:
While this course may be useful for any finance professional, the course targets the following:
Professionals in industry and practitioners with minimal business valuation experience
Executives, such as Controllers, CFOs, and Finance Directors, who seek an understanding of business valuations either for financial/tax reporting or for mergers and acquisitions
Public practice professionals working in audit or tax and looking to increase or refresh their specialized knowledge set