Title: International Accounting, 6/e
1International Accounting, 6/e
- Frederick D.S. Choi
- Gary K. Meek
Chapter 9 International Financial Statement
Analysis
2Learning Objectives
- What is a logical approach to analyzing foreign
financial statements? - Why is it difficult to undertake an international
business strategy analysis? - What are some steps to examining foreign
accounting practices? - How do cross-country variations in accounting
measurements, disclosure practices, and auditing
standards impact ones analysis of foreign
financial statements? - How can you cope with differences in national
accounting measurement practices? - What does international prospective analysis
entail and why is it difficult to perform in an
international setting? - What are some pitfalls to avoid when conducting
cross-country ratio analysis?
3What is a Logical Approach to Analyzing Foreign
Financial Statements?
- Undertake a business strategy analysis.
- Conduct an analysis of a firms financial
reporting practices. - Conduct a financial analysis using ratio and cash
flow data. - Do a prospective analysis.
4International Business Strategy Analysis
- Strategy analysis getting to know a company and
its competition in relation to its economic
environment. - Information gathering includes recourse to
- Annual reports
- Company staff, financial analysts, and other
financial professionals - World Wide Web
- Trade groups
- Competitors
- Reporters
- Lobbyists
- Regulators
- Financial press
5International Business Strategy Analysis (contin)
- Difficulties in undertaking an IB business
strategy analysis - Profit drivers and business risks may be country
specific. - National business and legal environments differ.
- Environmental risks such as changing process and
FX risk need to be evaluated. - Information sources may be limited or unreliable.
6Steps in Examining Foreign Accounting Practices
- Identify key accounting policies.
- Assess a firms accounting flexibility.
- Evaluate the firms accounting strategy.
- Evaluate the quality of its financial
disclosures. - Identify reporting outliers.
- Adjust for accounting measurements that distort
the underlying economics of a firms
transactions.
7How Does Diversity in International Accounting
Impact Financial Statement Analysis?
- Measurement differences within and between
countries make performance comparisons difficult. - Measurement differences may relate to measurement
options permitted by GAAP. - Measurement differences may be due to differences
in management discretion. - Measurement difference may be due to differences
in financial statement orientation i.e.,
creditor vs. shareholder. - Measurement differences may relate to the
objectives of financial statements i.e.,
oriented toward more macro decisions vs. micro
decisions.
8How Does Diversity in International Accounting
Impact Financial Statement Analysis? (contin)
- Differences in corporate transparency make it
difficult - to comprehend what measurement rules are being
followed - to estimate future performance metrics
- to value forecasted numbers because of large
variances of these subjective probability
distributions - Auditing differences affect the credibility of
reported numbers owing to differences in - the information content of the auditors report
- the source of auditing standards
- the enforcement of auditing standards
- auditor liability to third parties
- auditor qualifications
- auditor certification procedures
- auditor independence
9Coping Mechanisms
- For measurement differences
- Adopt a mutual fund (passive) approach to
investing. - Restate foreign GAAP to domestic GAAP.
- Restate foreign GAAP to IFRS.
- Rely on non-accounting data using a dividend
discount model or cash flow data. - Immerse yourself in the language, currency and
GAAP of the country you are investing in i.e.,
develop a multiple-principles capability.
10Coping Mechanisms (contin)
- For disclosure differences
- Undertake company visitations.
- Attend company road shows.
- Alter investment classifications from speculative
grade (poor disclosure) to investment grade (good
disclosure). - Alter investment strategies from active investing
(good disclosure) to passive or non-investing
(poor disclosure).
11Coping Mechanisms (contin)
- For audit differences
- Research the auditing environment in the country
being analyzed. - Institutional investors ask for a second audit
opinion or engage a recognized audit firm when
confidence in the integrity of the attest
function is in doubt. - Assess a higher risk premium for audit risk.
12Prospective Analysis
- Prospective analysis forecasting a firms
prospects based on an assessment of a firms
business strategy, accounting policy, and its
financial analysis, and arriving at an estimate
of the firms value. - Complicating factors
- Fluctuating exchange rates make it difficult to
forecast a firms future costs and revenues when
sales/purchases are invoiced in foreign
currencies. - National variations in measurement, disclosure,
and auditing practices including national
enforcement regimes add to the difficulty of
achieving forecast accuracy. - National variations in pricing risk make it
difficult to select an appropriate discount rate
for valuation purposes. - Valuation multiples such as P/E ratios also vary
from country to country complicating appropriate
corporate valuations.
13Pitfalls in Conducting International Ratio
Analysis
- All of the difficulties mentioned previously in
conducting business strategy, accounting, and
financial analysis. - A lack of understanding of the political, legal
and business environment that affects the
analysis of financial ratios generated in that
environment.
14Pitfalls in Conducting International Ratio
Analysis (contin)
- Examples of environmental differences
- Government systems
- UK and U.S. governments are more laissez-faire
i.e., ensure free markets. Self-regulation is
encouraged. - German and Japanese governments are more active
in orchestrating growth. Government has a major
role in market regulation. - Legal systems
- UK and U.S. governments are common law countries
where standard-setting is delegated to
professional bodies and standards oriented toward
investor decisions. - Germany and Japan are code law countries.
Government active in standard setting with
pronouncements oriented toward societal rights.
15Pitfalls in Conducting International Ratio
Analysis (contin)
- Fiscal systems
- UK and U.S. make a distinction between financial
reporting and tax reporting. Emphasis on
consolidated reporting. - Germany and Japan exhibit a degree of tax-book
conformity. Parent company financial statements
are important. - Capital markets
- UK and U.S. markets oriented more toward equity
investors. Theyre more equity-oriented with
significant individual ownership. Earnings tend
to have an optimistic bias. - German and Japanese markets traditionally
oriented toward creditors. Earnings tend to have
a more conservative bias with more smoothing
opportunities.
16Chapter Exhibits
17Chapter Exhibits (contin)
18Chapter Exhibits (contin)
19Chapter Exhibits (contin)
20Exhibit 9-4 (contin)
21Exhibit 9-4 (contin)
22Chapter Exhibits (contin)
23Chapter Exhibits (contin)
24Chapter Exhibits (contin)
25Chapter Exhibits (contin)
26Chapter Exhibits (contin)
27Chapter Exhibits (contin)
28Chapter Exhibits (contin)
29Exhibit 9-11 (contin)
30Chapter Exhibits (contin)
31Exhibit 9-12 (contin)