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Fundamentals of Accounting for Financial Analysts

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Learn Financial Statement Analysis, Accounting Fundamentals, Profitability, Liquidity, and more.
4.5
4.5/5
(1) Ratings
289 students
Created by Excel Mojo
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What you'll learn

  • Understand accounting from a financial analyst’s perspective
  • Analyze income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow statements
  • Understand gross profit, EBITDA, EBIT, and net income
  • Calculate and interpret profitability margins
  • Identify and adjust non-recurring items
  • Understand depreciation and amortization concepts
  • Analyze receivables, inventory, and payables
  • Evaluate liquidity using current ratio and quick ratio
  • Understand working capital efficiency and cash conversion cycle
  • Analyze cash flow statements using the indirect method
  • Understand Earnings Per Share (EPS) and its analytical importance
  • Develop stronger financial statement interpretation skills
This course includes:
2 total hours on-demand video
0 articles
0 downloadable resources
25 lessons
Full lifetime access
Access on mobile and TV
Certificate of completion
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Course content

Requirements

  • Basic familiarity with Excel
  • No prior accounting knowledge required
  • No prior financial analysis experience required
  • Basic familiarity with business concepts is helpful

Description

**This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.**

Financial analysts do not prepare financial statements. They analyze them.

Whether you are evaluating a company, building financial models, performing valuation, or conducting equity research, a strong understanding of accounting is essential.

This beginner-friendly course helps you understand accounting from a financial analyst’s perspective rather than a bookkeeping perspective.

The focus is not on journal entries, debits, credits, or transaction recording.

Instead, you’ll learn how analysts interpret financial statements to understand business performance, profitability, liquidity, working capital efficiency, and financial health.

The course begins with the Income Statement and explains how analysts evaluate a company’s profitability using a structured analytical framework.

You’ll learn income statement structure, gross profit, EBITDA, EBIT, net income, in addition to profitability margins and earnings quality concepts

You’ll also understand how analysts identify and adjust non-recurring items to improve the accuracy of financial analysis. As the program progresses, you’ll explore key accounting concepts that influence reported earnings and financial performance.

You’ll learn about:

  • Depreciation

  • Straight-line depreciation

  • Useful life

  • Salvage value

  • Expense allocation

  • Fiscal year versus calendar year reporting

The course then moves into Balance Sheet analysis and explains how analysts evaluate a company’s financial position. You’ll understand assets, liabilities, shareholders’ equity, the accounting equation, and dive into liquidity concepts and capital structure fundamentals

You’ll also learn how important balance sheet elements, like accounts receivable, inventory, and accounts payable, affect financial analysis and business performance.

You’ll additionally learn how analysts evaluate working capital efficiency using commonly used financial ratios and performance measures.

These accounting ratio topics covered in this course include:

  • Accounts receivable turnover

  • Days sales outstanding (DSO)

  • Accounts payable turnover

  • Days payable outstanding (DPO)

  • Cash conversion cycle

  • Current ratio

  • Quick ratio

As the program advances, you’ll learn how long-term assets impact reported earnings and financial statements.

You’ll understand:

  • Depreciation accounting

  • Amortization accounting

  • Tangible assets

  • Intangible assets

  • Finite life assets

  • Indefinite life assets

The course also introduces Cash flow statement analysis, one of the most important areas of financial analysis.

You’ll learn:

  • Cash flow from operations

  • Investing activities

  • Financing activities

  • Indirect method of cash flow preparation

  • Non-cash adjustments

  • Working capital adjustments

The program additionally covers Earnings Per Share (EPS), one of the most widely used measures in investment and valuation analysis. You’ll understand EPS calculation, profitability per share, the impact of share count changes, and investor interpretation of EPS.

Throughout the course, concepts are explained using practical examples to help build analytical understanding. You’ll work through accounting concepts, financial statement interpretation, profitability analysis, liquidity analysis, and cash flow analysis designed for real-world financial analysis workflows.

Whether you are a finance student, aspiring financial analyst, equity research professional, investment banking candidate, or valuation learner, this course helps build strong accounting foundations for financial analysis.

By the End of This Course, You Will Be Able To

  • Read and analyze financial statements more confidently

  • Understand how analysts evaluate business performance

  • Assess profitability, liquidity, and working capital efficiency

  • Interpret accounting information from an investment perspective

  • Identify key drivers behind reported earnings

  • Understand how accounting decisions affect financial analysis

  • Analyze cash flow generation and business quality

  • Build stronger foundations for financial modeling and valuation

What Makes This Course Different

  • Focuses on accounting from a financial analyst’s perspective rather than bookkeeping

  • Covers Income Statement, Balance Sheet, and Cash Flow Statement analysis

  • Uses practical examples and real company financial statements

  • Explains financial ratios and analytical interpretation clearly

  • Covers working capital and liquidity analysis in a structured manner

  • Designed specifically for finance, valuation, and investment-related careers

  • Offers a beginner-friendly approach without unnecessary accounting complexity

Who this course is for:

  • Finance students
  • Aspiring financial analysts
  • Equity research professionals
  • Investment banking candidates
  • Financial modeling learners
  • Valuation professionals
  • FP&A professionals
  • Anyone looking to strengthen accounting knowledge for financial analysis
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