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    Financial Analysis and Valuation
    Columbia Business School

    Financial Analysis and Valuation

    Columbia Business School, New York
    HomeFinanceColumbia Business SchoolFinancial Analysis and Valuation
    3 daysDuration
    in-personFormat
    EnglishLanguage
    FinanceTopic

    Next Available Cohort

    Choose your preferred start date

    Jun 9 - Jun 11, 2026
    3 days · in-person · Instructor-Led · Manhattanville Campus
    Open
    $8,150

    All-inclusive program fee

    About This Program

    Creating value is the central task for any executive. To generate value, managers need to be able to assess the financial impact of their decisions, which in turn requires an understanding of financial analysis techniques and valuation methods. Similarly, investors, creditors, and other stakeholders use such skills in evaluating the implications of decisions made by managers. Financial Analysis and Valuation will help you evaluate the financial consequences of business decisions and how to value companies, businesses, and investments. Please note that this program requires a basic understanding of the following: These concepts, above, are covered in the Columbia Business School Executive Education Finance and Accounting for the Nonfinancial Executive program. In this video, Professor Doron Nissim explains how the program helps executives understand the financial consequences of business decisions in their organizations.

    Why Columbia Business School?

    Few business schools can claim a campus embedded in one of the world's most consequential cities — and actually mean it. Columbia Business School has built its entire executive education philosophy around New York as a living laboratory: finance, media, technology, healthcare, and policy all intersect within walking distance of campus, and the faculty who teach executives are the same people advising the institutions that drive those industries.

    Your Profile

    • Financial Analysis and Valuation is designed for upper- and senior-level executives, financial analysts, portfolio managers, and other professionals interested in deepening their knowledge of financial analysis and valuation. This is not an entry-level program. Participants should have a basic understanding of financial reporting and financial analysis, including financial statements, key accounting principles, and present value techniques.

    Benefits

    • Investments: mergers and acquisitions (M&A), capital expenditures, investments in intellectual capital, leasing, and more
    • Strategies: product differentiation, economies of scale, cost leadership, outsourcing, economies of scope, diversification, and more
    • Working capital management: just in time inventory, credit terms, factoring receivables, operating credit, and more
    • Financing: level and type of borrowings, share repurchases, dividend policy, and more
    • Understand the information provided by the financial statements and other disclosures as well as its limitations
    • Reformulate and adjust the financial statements to facilitate an informative analysis
    • Analyze the reformulated financial statements to evaluate the firm’s profitability, earnings quality, and growth prospects
    • Develop cash flow forecasts and pro forma financial statements
    • Evaluate investment and business risks and estimate the cost of capital
    • Value companies, businesses, and investment projects
    • Assess the value of mergers, acquisitions, and strategic alliances
    • Analyze the impact of different business activities on the financial statements, key ratios and underlying dimensions, and value
    • Conduct scenario and sensitivity analyses

    What You'll Learn

    • What platform do you use to deliver live online programs? - We use the Zoom platform.
    • Part 1 Financial reporting - “Professor Nissim is absolutely brilliant. This course was hands-down one of the best classes I have ever taken in any capacity. I loved it so much that I might take it again.” Financial statements, Underlying accounting concepts, Summary of line-specific U.S. GAAP and differences relative to IFRS, Limitations and distortions of the financial statements, and implications for financial analysis and valuation
    • Part 2 Earnings quality and non-GAAP reporting - “Professor Nissim is absolutely brilliant. This course was hands-down one of the best classes I have ever taken in any capacity. I loved it so much that I might take it again.” Determinants of earnings quality, Evaluating earnings quality, Non-GAAP earnings
    • Part 3 Ratio analysis - “Professor Nissim is absolutely brilliant. This course was hands-down one of the best classes I have ever taken in any capacity. I loved it so much that I might take it again.” Reformulated financial statements, Profitability decomposition, Measuring recurring operating profitability, Fundamental risk analysis, Determinants and impact of capital structure and payout policy
    • Part 4 Capital budgeting and project evaluation - “Professor Nissim is absolutely brilliant. This course was hands-down one of the best classes I have ever taken in any capacity. I loved it so much that I might take it again.” Steps in capital budgeting, Investment criteria, Implementation
    • Part 5 Forecasting financial statements - “Professor Nissim is absolutely brilliant. This course was hands-down one of the best classes I have ever taken in any capacity. I loved it so much that I might take it again.” Information for forecasting, Forecasting revenue, Forecasting key ratios and deriving free cash flow
    • Part 6 Relative valuation - “Professor Nissim is absolutely brilliant. This course was hands-down one of the best classes I have ever taken in any capacity. I loved it so much that I might take it again.” Price multiples and other methods of relative valuation, Linking price multiples to fundamentals, Implementing relative valuation
    • Part 7 Fundamental valuation - “Professor Nissim is absolutely brilliant. This course was hands-down one of the best classes I have ever taken in any capacity. I loved it so much that I might take it again.” Fundamental valuation models, Cost of capital, Implementing discounted cash flow (DCF) valuation, Sensitivity and scenario analyses, Valuation settings

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How to Apply

    1. 1

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      Review the entry requirements listed on this page. Most executive programs require 8–15 years of professional experience.

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    4. 4

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      Gather your CV, reference letters, and any required test scores. Many EMBA programs waive standardised tests for senior candidates.

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