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Earnings Forecast

Earnings Forecast. June 21, 2012 Group E: Arjun Arulambalam Emily Crawford Rajesh Khullar Kira Hataley Yun Shim. Agenda. Introduction Case Study: SportsGoodStop External Study CICA Handbook: Section 4250 Future-Oriented Financial Information Conclusion Class Activity.

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Earnings Forecast

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  1. Earnings Forecast June 21, 2012 Group E: ArjunArulambalam Emily Crawford Rajesh Khullar KiraHataley Yun Shim

  2. Agenda • Introduction • Case Study: SportsGoodStop • External Study • CICA Handbook: Section 4250 • Future-Oriented Financial Information • Conclusion • Class Activity

  3. Has anyone used forecasts in the workplace?

  4. SportsGoodStop Company - Background • Derek Jeffries is the owner • Selling brand name sports jerseys, ball caps, and golf equipment • Operated 15 retail outlets throughout Western Canada • 5 franchises have already been approved • 10 more requests for franchise stores are waiting to be approved by the board of directors • Goal: Expand into Toronto and then into eastern Canada with a combination of company owned and franchise outlets

  5. SportsGoodStop Company - Issues • Better share price would be obtained for the IPO if potential investors were aware of the forecasted earnings • Debt to total assets ratio is already near the limit of 80% that his banker had set out several years ago • Forecasted budget may adopt accounting practices to increase assets

  6. SportsGoodStop Company – Auditor • Steven Snipes is a senior manager at Sloan and Travis a CA firm • Smaller firm with only one other public company • Derek Jeffries is a long time friend and client • Confrontation: Whether Derek could provide audit assurance of the forecasted earnings in four days • Derek has threaten to switch to the Big5 if S and T cannot complete the task

  7. SportsGoodStop Company- SportsGoodStop Income Projections SportsGoodStop - Growth Rate • In 2000, the company reduced is expenses more than the revenue fell therefore the net income still increased • In 2001 is it practical to have an increase of 3246% from the addition of a guaranteed 5 franchises

  8. SportsGoodStop - Forecasted Revenue • Initial franchise fees are a one time payment • Does it make sense to include as income? • Franchisee must capitalized the initial franchise fee rather than expensing it • Royalties are included as revenue • The income is incurred yearly and as percent of franchisee’s sales

  9. PWC Study • PWC Study • Increase in demand for trends and drivers of performances • To maintain investors confidence • KPMG Study • Organizations need to improve quality, reliability and insightfulness in the data they use to produce forecasts • Look beyond internal data sources to forecast performance • Scenario planning is a useful tool address uncertainty

  10. Handbook Section 4250

  11. Who would be the users of financial forecasts?

  12. Purpose and Scope • Establishes standards • For the measurement, presentation and disclosure of future-oriented financial information • Does not apply to historical pro-forma statements issued.

  13. Introduction to Section 4250 - Objective • Objective: The objective of presenting future-oriented financial information is to provide external users with information that assists them in evaluating any entity's financial prospects.

  14. Section 4250 - Definitions • Future-oriented financial information is information about prospective results of operations, financial position and/or cash flows, based on assumptions about future economic conditions and courses of action. Future-oriented financial information is presented as either a forecast or a projection. • General purpose future-oriented financial information prepared for external users with whom the entity is not negotiating or dealing directly. • Special purpose future-oriented financial information prepared for external users with whom the entity is negotiating or dealing directly.

  15. What is the difference between a forecast & a projection? • Forecast: prepared using assumptions which reflect the entity's planned courses of action for the period covered given management's judgment as to the most probable set of economic conditions • Projection: prepared using assumptions that reflect the entity's planned courses of action for the period covered given management's judgment as to the most probable set of economic conditions, together with one or more hypotheses that are assumptions which are consistent with the purpose of the information but are not necessarily the most probable in management's judgment.

  16. Measurement - Assumptions • Management is responsible for the process of developing assumptions and for ensuring that the assumptions developed are appropriate in the circumstances • One assumption may affect many parts of a business and lead to the formulation of other assumptions • Must be internally consistent

  17. Measurement - Assumptions • A forecast is based on reasonable and supportable assumptions that management believes reflect the most probable set of economic conditions and planned courses of action (.11 & .12) • Can vary according to circumstances • Consider time period (.12)

  18. Measurement - Assumptions • Hypotheses: assumptions that assume a set of economic conditions or courses of action that are not necessarily the most probable in management's judgment, but are consistent with the purpose of the projection. • To be reasonable, hypotheses must be: • Consistent with the purpose of the projection • Represent plausible circumstances • Need not be supportable

  19. Time Period • The period covered by future-oriented financial information should not extend beyond the point in time for which such information can be reasonably estimated • Depends on: • Needs of users • Ability to make appropriate assumptions • Nature of the industry • Operating cycle of the entity

  20. Time Period • Forecasts would not normally be prepared for periods beyond the following fiscal year except when there is reasonable assurance as to the operations in the forecast period • Projections may be presented for periods extending beyond the following fiscal year when there is a reasonable basis for making estimates, although the degree of uncertainty normally increases with the length of the future period covered

  21. Accounting Policies • Future-oriented financial information should be prepared in accordance with the accounting policies expected to be used in presenting historical financial statements for the future period • Facilitates comparisons with the actual results

  22. Presentation • General purpose future-oriented financial information should be presented in the format of historical financial statements and include at least an income statement • May want to present a balance sheet, a statement of retained earnings, and/or a cash flow statement • Special purpose future-oriented financial information should be presented in the level of detail and the format of presentation agreed between the parties

  23. Presentation • When future-oriented financial information is presented together with historical financial statements: • Notes to the future-oriented financial information need not include disclosures that would be repetitive of those in the historical financial statements, provided appropriate cross-reference is made • Presented in single monetary unit or range of amounts • Most useful presentation • Care should be used to ensure that the range is not so broad it is rendered meaningless

  24. General Disclosure • Future-oriented financial information should: • Include a cautionary note to the effect that actual results achieved for the period covered will vary from the information presented and that the variations may be material • Be clearly labelled as either a forecast or a projection

  25. General Disclosure • An entity presenting future-oriented financial information should disclose: • the effective date of the underlying assumptions • the extent to which actual financial results are incorporated and the period covered by those results • whether or not the entity intends to update the future-oriented financial information subsequent to issue

  26. General Disclosure • Users of the handbook are instructed numerous times to remind users of the limitations and uncertainties inherent in predicting future conditions and actions

  27. General Disclosure • Disclosure of the effective date • Events occurring subsequent to that date may affect the usefulness of the information presented • Disclosure of the extent to which actual results are incorporated and the period covered by those results • Provides an indication of the degree of reliability • Disclosure of intentions to revise future-oriented financial information and/or compare it to subsequent actual financial results

  28. Disclosure of Assumptions • Significant assumptions underlying future-oriented financial information should be disclosed • Hypotheses should be separately disclosed and identified • When a forecast is presented, the entity should: • disclose that the projection has been prepared using assumptions • disclose how assumptions are supported

  29. Assumptions • Assumptions vary in both their nature and significance. They are considered significant when: • Reflects an expectation of economic conditions significantly different from those currently prevailing, • Relatively high probability of a sizeable variation • Asmall change in the assumption would have a significant impact on the future-oriented financial information • Hypotheses are considered significant and would be disclosed

  30. Common Assumptions • All future-oriented financial information is premised on certain common assumptions about future conditions, including: • government's courses of action • absence of natural disasters • continuation of peace • Assumptions of this type are so general to the whole economy that they need not be disclosed unless an assumption has been made that is in conflict with conditions that are generally understood to exist

  31. Disclosure of Accounting Policies • When the future-oriented financial information incorporates a change in accounting policy the change should be described and its effect disclosed • When the entity intends to change an accounting policy, a description of the change and disclosure of its effect enables the user to understand the nature of the change and its impact and to compare future-oriented financial information with historical financial statements

  32. Other Disclosures • When there is a change in accounting policy in future orientated financial statements that is different from previously released financial statements, these changes should be disclosed. • The discloser should enable users to understand the impact and nature of these changes, and also enable comparisons between future-orientated and previous financial statements.

  33. Other Disclosures • For special Purpose future-orientated financial information, the following should be disclosed: • Identity of the intended users • Purpose of the statements • A cautionary note on the appropriateness of statements (should only be used for purpose intended) • Cannot be presented in a format that allows direct comparison with actual results

  34. Other Disclosures • Projections should likewise state the purpose and a cautionary note. • For example, an introduction to a projection might read, "This projection is designed to demonstrate the earnings expected if the operating capacity were increased fifty percent, and it may not be appropriate for other purposes".

  35. Conclusion • It is critical to ensure all forecasts follow the handbook as it provides reliability and transparency in the financial statements • Questions?

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