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Interpreting Company Reports and Accounts 9/e by Geoffrey Holmes,Alan Sugden,Paul Gee
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    • Product code: 21159
    • ISBN: 0273695460, ISBN13: 9780273695462, 313 pages, paperback
      Published by FT Prentice Hall, 9th edition, 2004
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    Description of Interpreting Company Reports and Accounts 9/e

    Interpreting Company Reports and Accounts guides the reader through the conventions and complexities of company accounts, explaining how to assess the financial and trading position of a company from year to year, how to spot undue risk taking and ''cosmetic accounting'' and where to look for clues on the quality of management.

    Packed with interesting real world examples, this is a highly practical book which shows readers how to analyse company reports and accounts, both qualitatively and quantitatively. The analysis is illustrated with over 200 extracts/examples from published accounts, ranging from BP and DIAGEO down to smaller companies on AIM.

    Key Features:

    - Key points from company accounts are highlighted and explained throughout the book.
    - Chapter 31: Putting it all Together takes readers step-by-step through the reports, accounts and press cuttings of an interesting AIM company.
    - The authors comment as well as inform - previous editions highlighted the serious weaknesses of both Polly Peck and Maxwell Communications Corporation well ahead of their collapse.
    - Very well written, engages students and brings the subject to life. New Features
    - A chapter detailing the differences between International and UK accounting standards, and how the ASB plans to close the gap.
    - New chapter on 'Accounting Practices - Cause for Concern?'
    - A critique on Corporate Governance.

    Interpreting Company Reports and Accounts is suitable for intermediate/advanced undergraduate accounting and finance courses and for MBA courses. The book is recommended reading for several professional examinations and will also be relevant to practitioners.

    Contents of Interpreting Company Reports and Accounts 9/e

    Preface

    1. Company reports and accounts - An Introduction
    2. Financial reporting standards and principles
    3. Forming a company
    4. Admission to listing
    5. Share capital and reserves
    6. Loan capital
    7. Intangible fixed assets
    8. Tangible fixed assets
    9. Fixed asset investments
    10. Stock and work in progress
    11. Debtors
    12. Current asset investments, cash at bank and in hand
    13. Bank loans and overdrafts
    14. Derivatives and other financial instruments
    15. Creditors, provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets
    16. Profit and loss account
    17. Taxation
    18. Profit after tax, dividends and earnings per share
    19. Cash flow statements
    20. Subsidiaries and group accounts
    21. Acquisitions and mergers
    22. Associates, joint ventures and related parties
    23. Foreign exchange
    24. Historical summaries, ratios and trends
    25. Chairman’s statement, operating and financial reviews and directors’ report
    26. Corporate governance and the auditors' report
    27. Interim reports
    28. Other sources of information
    29. Inflation
    30. Accounting practices – cause for concern?
    31. International accounting comparisons
    32. Putting it all together
    33. Developments in accounting

    Appendix 1 - Current Financial Reporting Standards and Exposure Drafts
    Appendix 2 - Present value
    Appendix 3 - Retail Price Indices since 1950
    Appendix 4 - Problems and solutions
    Appendix 5 - International Accounting Standards (IAS) and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)

    Index

    About Geoffrey Holmes, Alan Sugden and Paul Gee

    Geoffrey Holmes FCA, FTII was, for more than twenty years, the highly regarded and much respected Editor of Accountancy, the Journal of the Institute of Chartered Accountants. Alan Sugden is a Sloan Fellow of the London Business School and a retired director of Schroder Investment Management. He spent nearly 20 years in the City as an Analyst and fund manager, running the GBP100 million Schroder Recovery Fund for several years.

    Paul Gee BA (Econ) FCA is Technical Director of Bristol based accountants Solomon Hare, and lectures widely in the UK on financial reporting.

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