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Chartered Management Accountants are involved at every level in
organisations throughout the world. They are crucial members of the management
team, making decisions and supplying information vital to the running of
organisations in both the public and private sectors.
As Chartered Management Accountants students will be qualified to work in a
variety of businesses from large-scale corporations to management consultancy
Practises. With over 58,000 students and 44,000 members are employed by
organisations such as Procter $ Gamble, ICI, Cadbury Schweppes, IBM, British
Airways and CoopersLybrandDeloitte, CIMA is the leading financial qualification
for business today.
Students who complete the Managerial level will be awarded the CIMA Advanced
Diploma in Management Accounting.
Entry Qualifications 1. Completion of ALL Foundation Level subjects 2.
Students with good academic qualifications may be given exemption from
Foundation level provided subject-by-subject exemptions are confirmed by CIMA.
All Students need to register as members of the Institute at the following
address: Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA) 26 Chapter
Street London SW1P 4NP Tel:+44 (0)20 7663 5441
Duration of course This level consists of 6 subjects comprising 3
learning pillars: Management Accounting pillar, Business Management pillar and
Financial Management pillar. CIMA will grant students a transfer credit under
its transitional arrangements for those who have passed subjects under the old
syllabus. It is quite normal practice to spend two semesters on one module in
order to be confident in passing the examinations. Tutors recommend that
students do not sit more than three subjects in any one sitting when taking the
subject for the first time. Note: students are requested to read the section at
the back of the student handbook.
Syllabus The Full Syllabus – Managerial Level This section sets out
the specific syllabus for each of the six papers within the three learning
pillars at the Managerial Level. However, it is implicit in each case, that
material included in the syllabus for any of the papers within the CIMA
Certificate in Business Accounting qualification, may also be relevant for the
purpose of assessment, in related subjects. The syllabus for the CIMA
Certificate in Business Accounting qualification can be viewed on the CIMA
website.
PAPER P1 MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING PERFORMANCE EVALUATION Syllabus
outline Topic and Study Weighting A. Cost Accounting Systems 25% B.
Standard Costing 25% C. Budgeting 30% D. Control and Performance
Measurement of Responsibility Centres 20% Syllabus Content A – Cost
Accounting Systems – 25% Syllabus Content 1. Marginal (or variable)
costing as a system of profit reporting and stock valuation. 2. Absorption
costing as a system of profit reporting and stock valuation. 3. Throughput
accounting as a system of profit reporting and stock valuation. 4.
Activity-based costing as a potential system of profit reporting and stock
valuation. 5. The integration of standard costing with marginal cost
accounting, absorption cost accounting and throughput accounting. 6. Process
accounting including establishment of equivalent units in stock,
work-in-progress and abnormal loss accounts and the use of first-in-first-out,
average cost and standard cost methods of stock valuation. 7. MRP and ERP
systems for resource planning and the integration of accounting functions with
other systems, such as purchase ordering and production planning. 8.
Back-flush accounting in just-in-time production environments. The benefits of
just-in-time production, total quality management and theory of constraints and
the possible impacts of these methods on cost accounting and performance
measurement. B – Standard Costing – 25% Syllabus Content 1.
Manufacturing standards for material, labour, variable overhead and fixed
overhead. 2. Price/rate and usage/efficiency variances for materials, labour
and variable overhead. Further subdivision of total usage/efficiency variances
into mix and yield components. (Note: The calculation of mix variances on both
individual and average valuation bases is required.) 3. Fixed overhead
expenditure and volume variances.(Note: the subdivision of fixed overhead volume
variance into capacity and efficiency elements will not be examined.) 4.
Planning and operational variances. 5. Standard and variances in service
industries, (including a the phenomenon of “McDonaldization”), public services
(e.g. Health), (including the use of “diagnostic related” or “reference”
groups), and the professions (e.g. labour mix variances in audit work).
Criticisms of standard costing in general and in advanced manufacturing
environments in particular. 6. Sales price and sales revenue/margin volume
variances (calculation of the latter on a unit basis related to revenue, gross
margin and contribution margin). Application of these variances to all sectors,
including professional services and retail analysis. 7. Interpretation of
variances: interrelationship, significance. 8. Benchmarking 9.
Behavioural implications of setting standard costs. C – Budgeting –
30% Syllabus Content 1. Time series analysis including moving totals and
averages, treatment of seasonality, trend analysis using regression analysis and
the application of these techniques in forecasting product and service volumes.
2. Fixed, variable, semi-variable and activity-based categorisations of cost
and their application in projecting financial results. 3. What-if analysis
based on alternative projections of volumes, prices and cost structures and the
use of spreadsheets in facilitating these analyses. 4. The purpose of
budgets and conflicts that can arise (e.g. between budgets for realistic
planning and budgets based on ‘hard to achieve’ targets for motivation). 5.
The creation of budgets including incremental approaches, zero-based budgeting
and activity-based budgets. 6. The use of budgets for control: controllable
costs and variances based on ‘fixed’ and ‘flexed’ budgets. The conceptual link
between standard costing and budget flexing. 7. Behavioural issues in
budgeting: participation in budgeting and its possible beneficial consequences
for ownership and motivation, participation in budgeting and its possible
adverse consequences for ‘budget padding’ and manipulation; setting budget
targets for motivation etc. 8. Criticisms of budgeting and the
recommendations of the advocates of the balanced scorecard and ‘beyond
budgeting’. D – Control and Performance Measurement of Responsibility
Centres – 20% Syllabus Content 1. Organisation structure and its
implications for responsibility accounting. 2. Presentation of financial
information including issues of controllable/uncontrollable costs,
variable/fixed costs and tracing revenues and costs to particular cost objects.
3. Return on investment and its deficiencies, the emergence of residual
income and economic value added to address these. 4. Behavioural issues in
the application of performance measures in cost profit and investment centres.
5. The theory of transfer pricing, including perfect, imperfect and no
market for the intermediate good. 6. Use of negotiated, market, cost-plus
and variable cost based transfer prices. ‘Dual’ transfer prices and lump sum
payments as means of addressing some of the issues that arise. 7. The
interaction of transfer pricing and tax liabilities in international operations
and implications for currency management and possible distortion of internal
company operations in order to comply with Tax Authority directives. PAPER
P2 MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING DECISION MANAGEMENT Syllabus Outline The syllabus
comprises: Topic and Study Weighting A. Financial Information for
Short-term Decision Making 30% B. Financial Information for Long-term
Decision Making 25% C. The Treatment of Uncertainty in Decision Making
15% D. Cost Planning and Analysis for Competitive Advantages 30% Syllabus
Content A – Financial Information for Short-term Decision Making –
30% Syllabus content 1. Relevant cash flows and their use in short-term
decision, typically concerning acceptance/rejection of contracts, pricing and
cost/benefit comparisons. 2. The importance of strategic, intangible and
non-financial judgements in decision-making. 3. Pricing decisions for profit
maximising in imperfect markets. (Note: tabular methods of solution are
acceptable). 4. Pricing strategies and the financial consequences of market
skimming, premium pricing, penetration pricing, loss leaders, product
bundling/optional extras and product differentiation to appeal to different
market segments. 5. The allocation of joint costs and decisions concerning
process and product viability based on relevant costs and revenues. 6.
Multi-product break-even analysis, including break-even and profit/volume
charts, contribution/sales ratio, margin of safety etc. 7. Simple product
mix analysis in situations where there are limitations on product/service demand
and one other production constraint. 8. Linear programming for more complex
situations involving multiple constraints. Solution by graphical methods of two
variable problems, together with understanding of the mechanics of simplex
solutions, shadow prices etc. (Note: questions requiring the full application of
the simplex algorithm will not be set although candidates should be able to
formulate an initial tableau, interpret a final simplex tableau and apply the
information it contained in a final tableau.) B – Financial Information for
Long-term Decision Making – 25% Syllabus content 1. The process of
investment decision making, including origination of proposals, creation of
capital budgets, go/on go decisions on individual projects (where judgements on
qualitative issues interact with financial analysis), and post audit of
completed projects. 2. Generation of relevant project cash flows taking
account of inflation, tax, and ‘final’ project value where appropriate. 3.
Activity-based costing to derive approximate ‘long-run’ costs appropriate for
use in strategic decision making. 4. The techniques of investment appraisal;
payback, discounted payback, accounting rate of return, net present value and
internal rate of return. 5. Application of the techniques of investment
appraisal to project cash flows and evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses
of the techniques. 6. Sensitivity analysis to identify the input variables
that most effect the chosen measure of project worth (payback, ARR, NPV or IRR).
7. Methods of dealing with particular problems: the use of annuities in
comparing projects with unequal lives and the profitability index in capital
rationing situations. C- The Treatment of Uncertainty in Decision Making –
15% Syllabus content 1. The nature of risk and uncertainty. 2.
Sensitivity analysis in decision modelling and the use of computer software for
“what if” analysis. 3. Assignment of probabilities to key variables in
decision models. 4. Analysis of probabilistic models and interpretation of
distributions of project outcomes. 5. Expected value tables and the value of
information. 6. Decision trees for multi-stage decision problems. D –
Cost Planning and Analysis for Competitive Advantage – 30% Syllabus
content 1. Value analysis and quality function deployment. 2. The
benefits of just-in-time production, total quality management and theory of
constraints and the implications of these methods for decision-making in the
“new manufacturing environment”. 3. Kaizen costing, continuous improvement
and cost of quality reporting. 4. Learning curves and their use in
predicting product/service costs, including derivation of the learning rate and
the learning index. 5. Activity-based management in the analysis of overhead
and its use in improving the efficiency of repetitive overhead activities.
6. Target costing. 7. Life cycle costing and implications for marketing
strategies. 8. The value chain and supply chain management, including the
trend to outsource manufacturing operations to Eastern Europe and the Far East.
9. Gain sharing arrangements in situations where, because of the size of the
project, a limited number of contractors or security issues (e.g. in defence
work), normal competitive pressures do not apply. 10. The use of direct and
activity-based cost methods in tracing costs to ‘cost objects’, such as
customers or distribution channels, and the comparison of such costs with
appropriate revenues to establish ‘tiered’ contribution levels, as in the
activity-based cost hierarchy. 11. Pareto analysis. PAPER P4
ORGANISATION MANAGEMENT AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS Syllabus Outline The
syllabus comprises: Topic and Studying Weighting A. Information Systems
20% B. Change Management 10% C. Operations Management 20% D. Marketing
20% E. Managing Human Capital 30% A – Information Systems –
20% Syllabus Content 1. Introduction to hardware and software in common
use in organisations. 2. Hardware and applications architectures (i.e.
centralised, distributed, client server) and the IT required to run them (PCs,
servers, networks and peripherals). 3. General Systems Theory and its
application to IT (i.e. system definition, system components, system behaviour,
system classification, entropy, requisite variety, coupling and decouping).
4. Recording and documenting tools used during the analysis and design of
systems ( i.e. entity-relationship model, logical data structure, entity life
history, dataflow diagram, and decision table). 5. Databases and database
management systems. (Note: knowledge of database structures will not be
required). 6. The problems associated with the management of in-house and
vendor solutions and how they can be avoided or solved. 7. IT-enabled
transformation (i.e. the use of information systems to assist in change
management). 8. System changeover methods (i.e. direct, parallel, pilot and
phased). 9. IS implementation (i.e. methods of implementation, avoiding
problems of non-usage and resistance). 10. The benefits of IT systems.
11. IS evaluation, including the relationship of sub-systems to each other
and testing. 12. IS outsourcing 13. Maintenance of systems (i.e.
corrective, adaptive, preventative). B – Change Management – 10% Syllabus
Content 1. External and internal change triggers (e.g. environmental factors,
mergers and acquisitions, re-organisation and rationalisation). 2. The
stages in the change process. 3. Approaches to change management (e.g. Beer
and Nohria, Kanter, Lewin and Peters, Senge et al.). 4. The importance of
managing critical periods of change through the life cycle of the firm. C –
Operations Management – 20% Syllabus Content 1. An overview of operations
strategy and its importance to the firm. 2. Design of products/services and
processes and how this relates to operations and supply. 3. Methods for
managing inventory, including continuous inventory systems (e.g. Economic Order
Quantity, EOQ), periodic inventory systems and the ABC system (Note: ABC is not
an acronym. A refers to high value, B to medium and C to low value inventory).
4. Strategies for balancing capacity and demand including level capacity,
chase and demand management strategies. 5. Methods of performance
measurement and improvement, particularly the contrast between benchmarking and
Business Process Re-engineering (BPR). 6. Practices of continuous
improvement (e.g. Quality circles, Kaizen, 5S, 6 Sigma). 7. The use of
benchmarking in quality measurement and improvement. 8. Different methods of
quality measurement (i.e. operational, financial and customer measures). 9.
The characteristics of lean production, flexible, workforce practices,
high-commitment human resource policies and commitment to continuous
improvement. Criticisms and limitations of lean production. 10. Systems used
in operations management: Manufacturing Resource Planning (MRP), Optimised
Production Technologies (OPT), Just-in-Time (JIT) and Enterprise Resource
Planning (ERP). 11. Approaches to quality management, including Total
Quality Management (TQM), various British Standard (BS) and European Union (EU)
systems as well as statistical methods of quality control. 12. External
quality standards (e.g. the various ISO standards appropriate to products and
organisations). 13. Use of the intranet in information management (e.g.
meeting customer support needs). ] 14. Contemporary developments in quality
management. 15. The role of the supply chain and supply networks in gaining
competitive advantage, including the use of sourcing strategies (e.g. single,
multiple, delegated and parallel). 16. Supply chain management as a
strategic process (e.g. Reck and Long’s strategic positioning tool, Cousins’
strategic supply wheel). 17. Developing and maintaining relationships with
suppliers. D – Marketing – 20% Syllabus Content 1. Introduction to the
marketing concept as a business philosophy. 2. An overview of the marketing
environment, including societal, economic, technological, physical and legal
factors affecting marketing. 3. Understanding consumer behaviour, such as
factors affecting buying decision, types of buying behaviour and stages in the
buying process. 4. Marketing research, including data gathering techniques
and methods of analysis. 5. Marketing Decision Support System (MDSS) and
their relationship to market research. 6. How business-to-business (B2B)
marketing differs from business to consumer (B2C) marketing. 7. Segmentation
and targeting of markets, and positioning of products within markets. 8. The
differences and similarities in the marketing of products and services. 9.
Devising and implementing of pricing strategy. 10. Marketing communications
(i.e. mass, direct, interactive). 11. Distribution channels and methods for
marketing campaigns. 12. The role of marketing in the strategic plan of the
organisation. 13. Use of the Internet (e.g. in terms of data collection,
marketing activity and providing enhanced value to customers and suppliers) and
potential drawbacks (e.g. security issues). 14. Market forecasting methods
for estimating current (e.g. Total Market Potential, Area Market Potential and
Industry Sales and Market Shares) and future (e.g. Survey of Buyers’ Intentions,
Composite of Sales Force Opinions, Expert Opinion, Past-Sales Analysis and
Market-Test Method) demand for products and services. 15. Internal marketing
as the process of training and motivating employees so as to support the firm’s
external marketing activities. 16. Social responsibility in a marketing
context. E – Managing Human Capital – 30% Syllabus Content 1. The
relationship of the employee to other elements of the business plan. 2.
Determinants and content of a human resource (HR) plan (e.g. organisational
growth rate, skills, training, development, strategy, technologies and natural
wastage). 3. Problems in implementing an HR plan and ways to manage this.
4. The process of recruitment and selection of staff using different
recruitment channels (i.e. interviews, assessment centres, intelligence tests,
aptitude tests, psychometric tests). 5. Issues relating to fair and legal
employment practices (e.g. recruitment, dismissal, redundancy, and ways of
managing these). 6. Issues in the design of reward systems (e.g. the role of
incentives, the utility of performance-related pay, arrangements for knowledge
workers, flexible work arrangements). 7. The importance of negotiation
during the offer and acceptance of a job. 8. The process of induction and its
importance. 9. Theories of Human Resource Management (e.g. Taylor, Schein,
McGregor, Maslow, Herzberg, Handy, Lawrence and Lorsch). 10. High
performance work arrangements. 11. The distinction between development and
training and the tools available to develop and train staff. 12. The
importance of appraisals, their conduct and their relationship to the reward
system. 13. HR in different organisational forms (e.g. project-based firms,
virtual or networked firms). 14. Personal business ethics and the CIMA
Ethical Guidelines. PAPER P5 INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT Syllabus
Outline The syllabus comprises: Topic and Study Weighting A. The Basis
of Strategic Management 30% B. Project Management 40% C. The Management of
Relationships 30% Syllabus Content A – The Basis of Strategic Management –
30% Syllabus Content 1. The process of strategy formulation. 2. The
relationship between strategy and organisational structure. 3. The reasons
for conflict between the objectives of an organisation, or between the
objectives of an organisation and its stakeholders, and the ways to manage this
conflict. 4. Strategic decision making processes. 5. Approaches to
strategic (e.g. rational, adaptive, emergent, evolutionary or system-based views
based on Porter, Mintzberg, Bartlett and Ghoshal). 6. Transaction cost view
of the firm (e.g. Coase, Williamson) and its implication for organisational
structure. 7. Resource-based views of the firm and implications for strategy
development. 8. Ecology perspective on the firm. 9. The determinants,
importance and role of organisational cultures and ways to improve the
effectiveness of an organisation. 10. Introduction to corporate governance,
including stakeholders and the role of government. 11. Translating strategy
into business (e.g. formation of strategic business units, encouragement of
entrepreneurship inside organisations). 12. Contemporary issues in business
management (e.g. alliances, demergers, virtual organisations, corporate social
responsibility and business ethics). B – Project Management –
40% Syllabus Content 1. The definition of a project, project management,
and the contrast with repetitive operations and line management. 2. 4-D and
7-5 models to provide an overview of the project process, and the nine key
process areas (PM) to show what happens during each part of the process. 3.
Stakeholders (both process and outcome) and their needs. 4. Roles of project
sponsors, boards, champions, managers and clients. 5. Key tools for project
managers (e.g. Work Breakdown Structure, network diagrams (Critical Path
Analysis), Gantt charts, resource histograms, establishment of gates and
milestones). 6. Evaluation of plans for projects. 7. The key processes
of PRINCE2 and their implications for project staff. 8. The role of
determining trade-offs between key project objectives of time, cost and quality.
9. Managing scope at the outset of a project and providing systems for
configuration management/change control. 10. The production of basic plans
for time, cost and quality. 11. Scenario planning and buffering to make
provision for uncertainty in projects, and the interface with the risk
management process. 12. Organisational structures, including the role of the
project and matrix organisations, and their impact on project achievement.
13. Teamwork, including recognising the life-cycle of teams, team/groups
behaviour and selection. 14. Control of time, cost and quality through
performance and conformance management systems. 15. Project completion
documentation, stakeholder marketing, completion reports and system close-down.
16. The use of post-completion audit and review activities and the
justification of their costs. C – Management of Relationships –
30% Syllabus Content 1. The concepts of power, authority, bureaucracy,
leadership, responsibility and delegation and their application to relationship
within an organisation and outside it. 2. The characteristics of leaders,
managers and entrepreneurs. 3. Management-style theories (e.g. likert,
Tannenbaurn and Schmidt, Blake and Mouton). 4. The use of systems of control
within the organisation (e.g. employment contracts, performance appraisal,
reporting structures). 5. Theories of control within firms and types of
organisational structure (e.g. matrix, divisional, network). 6. The
advantages and disadvantages of different styles of management. 7. Managing
different countries and cultures. 8. Contingency approaches to management
style (e.g. Adair, Fiedler). 9. Theories of group development, behaviour and
roles (e.g. Tuckman, Belbin). 10. Disciplinary procedures and their
operation, including the form and process of formal disciplinary action and
dismissal (e.g. industrial tribunals, arbitration and conciliation). 11.
Personal time management. 12. The nature and effect of legal issues
affecting work and employment, including the principles of employment law (i.e.
relating to health, safety, discrimination, fair treatment, childcare, contracts
of employment and working time). 13. The sources of conflict in
organisations and the ways in which conflict can be managed to ensure that
working relationships are productive and effective. 14. Communication skills
(i.e. types of communication tools and their use, as well as the utility and
conduct of meetings) and ways of managing communication problems. 15.
Negotiation skills. 16. Creativity and idea generation. 17. Information
gathering techniques (e.g. interviews, questionnaires). 18. Introduction to
compare governance, including business ethics and the role, obligations and
expectations of a manger. PAPER P7 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING AND TAX
PRINCIPLES Syllabus Outline The syllabus comprises: Topic and Study
Weighting A. Principles of Business Taxation 20% B. Principles of
Regulation of Financial Reporting 10% C. Single Company Financial Accounts
45% D. Managing short Term Finance 25% Syllabus Content A – Principle
of Business Taxation – 20% Syllabus Content 1. Concepts of direct versus
indirect taxes, taxable person and competent jurisdiction. 2. Sources of tax
rule s(e.g. domestic primary legislation and court rulings, practice of the
relevant taxing authority, supranational bodies, such as the EU in the case of
value added/sales tax, and international tax treaties). 3. Direct taxes on
company profits and gains: ? The principles of non-deductibility of
dividends and systems of taxation defined according to the treatment of
dividends in the hands of the shareholder (e.g. classical, partial imputation
and imputation), ? The distinction between accounting and taxable profits in
absolute terms (e.g. disallowable expenditure on revenue account, such as
entertaining, and on capital account, such as formation and acquisition costs)
and in terms of timing (e.g. deduction on a paid basis, tax depreciation
substituted for book depreciation), ? The nature of rules recharacterising
interest payments as dividends, ? Potential for variation in rules for
calculating the tax base dependent on the nature or source of the income
(scheduler systems), ? The need for rules dealing with the relief of losses,
? The concept of tax consolidation (e.g. relief of losses and deferral of
capital gains on asset transfers within a group). a)Indirect taxes collected
by the company: ? In the context of indirect taxes, the distinction between
unit taxes (e.g. exercise duties based on physical measures) and advalorem taxes
(e.g. sales tax based on value), ? The mechanism of value added/sales taxes,
in which businesses are liable for tax on their outputs less credit for tax paid
on their inputs, including the concepts of exemption and variation in tax rates
depending on the type of output and disallowance of input credits for exempt
outputs. b) Employee taxation: ? The employee as a separate taxable
person subject to a personal income tax regime, ? Use of employer reporting
and withholding to ensure compliance and assist tax collection. 1.The need
for record-keeping and record retention that may be additional to that required
for financial accounting purposes. 2. The need for deadlines for reporting
(filing returns) and tax payments. Types of powers of tax authorities to
ensure with tax rules: ? Power of review and query filed returns, ?
Power to request special reports or returns, ? Power to examine records
(generally extending back some years), ? Powers of entry and search, ?
Exchange of information with tax authorities in other jurisdictions. c)
International taxation: ? The concept of corporate residence and the
variation in rules for its determination across jurisdiction (e.g. place of
incorporation versus place of management), ? Types of payments on which
withholding tax may be required (especially interest, dividends, royalties and
capital gains accruing to non-residents), ? Means of establishing a taxable
presence in another country (local company and branch), ? The effect of
double tax treaties (based on the OECD Model Convention) on the above (e.g.
reduction of withholding tax rates, provisions for defining a permanent
establishment), ? Principles of relief for foreign taxes by exemption,
deduction and credit. 1. The distinction between tax avoidance and tax
evasion, and how these vary among jurisdictions (including the difference
between the use of statutory general anti-avoidance provisions and case law
regimes). 2. Accounting treatment of taxation and disclosure requirements
under IAS 12. Note: Examples of general principles should be drawn from a
‘benchmark’ tax regime (e.g. the UK, USA, etc) or an appropriate local tax
regime. Details of any specific tax regime will NOT be examined. B –
Principles of Regulation of Financial Reporting – 10% Syllabus Content 1.
The need for regulation of accounts. 2. Elements in a regulatory framework
for published accounts (e.g. company law, local GAAP, review of accounts by
public bodies). 3. GAAP based on prescriptive versus principles-based
standards. 4. The role and structure of the IASB and IOSCO. 5. The
IASB’s Framework for the Presentation and Preparation of Financial Statements.
6. The process leading to the promulgation of a standard practice. 7.
Ways in which IAS’s are used: adoption as local GAAP, model for local GAAP,
persuasive influence in formulating local GAAP. 8. The powers and duties of
the external auditors, the audit report and its qualification for accounting
statements no in accordance with best practice. C – Single Company Financial
Accounts – 45% Syllabus Content 1. Preparation of the financial statements
of a single company, including the statement of changes in equity (IAS 1).
2. Preparation of cash flow statements (IAS 7). 3. Reporting
performance: recognition of revenue, measurement of profit or loss,
extraordinary items, prior period items, discontinuing operations and segment
reporting (IAS 1, 8, 14, 18, & 35). 4. Property, Plant and Equipment
(IAS 16): the calculation of depreciation and the effect of revaluations,
charges to economic useful life, repairs, improvements and disposals. 5.
Inventories (IAS 2). 6. Issue and redemption of shares, including treatment
of share issue and redemption costs (IAS 32 and IAS 39), the share premium
account, the accounting for maintenance of capital arising from the purchase by
a company of its own shares. 7. The disclosure of related parties to a
business (IAS 24). 8. Construction contracts and related financing costs
(IAS 11 & 23): determined of cost, net realisable value, the inclusion of
overheads and the measurement of profit on uncompleted contracts. 9.
Research and development costs (IAS 38): criteria for capitalisation. 10.
Intangible Assets (IAS 38) and goodwill (excluding that arising on
consolidation); recognition, valuation and amortisation. 11. Impairment of
Assets (IAS 36) and its effect on the above. 12. Post-balance sheet events
(IAS 10). 13. Provisions and contingencies (IAS 37). 14. Leases (IAS 17)
– Operating and finance leases in the books of the lessee. D – Managing
Short Term Finance – 25% Syllabus Content 1. Working capital ratios (e.g.
debtor days, stock days, creditor days, current ratio, quick ratio) and the
working capital cycle. 2. Working capital characteristics of different
businesses (e.g. supermarkets being heavily funded by creditors) and the
importance of industry comparisons. 3. Cash-flow forecasts, use of
spreadsheets to assist in this in terms of changing variables (e.g. interest
rates, inflation) and in consolidating in a forecast. 4. Variables that are
most easily changed, delayed or brought forward in a forecast. 5. The link
between cash, profit and the balance sheet. 6. The Baumol and Miller-Orr
cash management models. 7. The credit cycle from receipt of customer order
to cash receipt. 8. Evaluation of payment terms and settlement discounts.
9. Preparation and interpretation of age analyse of debtors and creditors.
10. Establishing collection targets on an appropriate basis (e.g.
motivational issues in managing credit control). 11. The payment cycle form
agreeing the order to making payments. 12. Centralised versus decentralised
purchasing. 13. The relationship between purchasing and stock control.
14. Principles of the economic order quantity (EOQ) model and criticisms
thereof. 15. Types and features of short-term finance: trade creditors,
overdrafts, short-term loans and debt factoring. 16. Use and abuse of trade
creditors as a source of finance. 17. The principles of investing short term
(i.e. maturity, return, security, liquidity and diversification). 18. Types
of investments (e.g. interest-bearing bank accounts, negotiable instruments
including certificates of deposit, short-term treasury bills and securities).
19. The difference between the coupon on debt and the yield to maturity.
20. Export finance (e.g. documentary credits, bills of exchange, export
factoring, forfeiting). PAPER P8 FINANCIAL ANALYSIS Syllabus
Outline The syllabus comprises: Topic and Studying Weighting A. Group
Financial Statements 35% B. The Measurement of Income and Capital 20% C.
Analysis and Interpretation of Financial Accounts 35% D. Developments in
External Reporting 10% A – Group Financial Statements - 35% Syllabus
Content 1. Relationships between investors and investees, and the exclusion
of subsidiaries form consolidation with reference to dominant influence,
participating interest, management on a unified basis and significant influence.
2. The preparation of consolidated financial statements (including the group
cash flow statement) involving one or more subsidiaries, sub-subsidiaries and
associates, under the acquisition and pooling of interests methods (IAS 7, 22
& 27). 3. The treatment in consolidation financial statements of
minority interests, pre and post acquisition reserves, goodwill (including its
impairment), fair value adjustments, intra-group transactions and dividends,
piece-meal and mid-year acquisitions, and disposals to include sub-subsidiaries
and mixed groups. 4. The accounting treatment of associate and joint
ventures (IAS 28 & 31) using the equity method and proportional
consolidation method. 5. The accounting entries for mergers, demergers and
capital reconstruction schemes. 6. Foreign currency translation (IAS 21) to
include overseas transactions and investments in overseas subsidiaries. B –
The Measurement of Income and Capital – 20% Syllabus Content 1. The
problems of profit measurement and the effect of alternative approaches to asset
valuation; current cost and current purchasing power bases and the real terms
system; accounting for changing prices (IAS 15) and hyper inflation (IAS 29).
2. The principles of substance over form (IAS 1) and its influence in
dealing with transactions such as sale and repurchase agreements, consignment
stock, debt factoring, securitised assets, loan transfers and public and private
sector financial collaboration. 3. Financial instruments classified as
liabilities or shareholders funds and the allocation of finance costs over the
term of the borrowing (IAS 32 & 39). 4. The measurement and disclosure
of financial instruments (IAS 39). 5. Retirement benefits, including pension
schemes – defined benefit schemes and defined contribution schemes, actuarial
deficits and surpluses (IAS 19). C – Analysis and Interpretation of
Financial Accounts – 35% Syllabus Content 1. Ratios in the areas of
performance, profitability, financial adaptability, liquidity, activity,
shareholder investment and financing, and their interpretation. 2.
Calculation of Earnings per Share under IAS 33, to include the effect of bonus
issues, rights issues and convertible stock. 3. Interpretation of financial
statements via the analysis of the accounts and corporate reports. 4.
Reporting the results of analysis. 5. Limitations of ratio analysis (e.g.
comparability of businesses and accounting policies). 6. The identification
of information required to assess financial performance and the extent to which
financial statements fail to provide such information. 7. Segment analysis:
inter-firm and international comparison (IAS 14). 8. Interpretation of
financial obligations included in financial accounts (e.g. redeemable debt,
earn-out arrangements, contingent liabilities. 9. The effect of short-term
debt on the measurement of gearing. 10. The need to be aware of aggressive
or unusual accounting policies “creative accounting”, (e.g. in the areas of cost
capitalisation and revenue recognition). D – Developments in External
Reporting – 10% Syllabus Content 1. Increasing stakeholder demands for
information that goes beyond historical financial information and the model for
an expanded Operating and Financial Review (OFR) proposed by the UK government.
2. Environmental and social accounting issues, differentiating between
environmental measures and environmental losses, capitalisation of environmental
expenditure, and the recognition of future environmental costs by means of
provisions. 3. The Global Reporting Initiative: non-financial measures of
environmental impact. 4. Human resource accounting. 5. The influence of
different cultures on financial reporting. 6. Pressures for improved quality
of financial reporting following large scale corporate collapses in the US and
UK, and implications for corporate governance and external audit. 7. Major
differences between IAS’s and US GAAP.
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