Book Image

Hands-On Financial Modeling with Excel for Microsoft 365 - Second Edition

By : Shmuel Oluwa
Book Image

Hands-On Financial Modeling with Excel for Microsoft 365 - Second Edition

By: Shmuel Oluwa

Overview of this book

Financial modeling is a core skill required by anyone who wants to build a career in finance. Hands-On Financial Modeling with Excel for Microsoft 365 explores financial modeling terminologies with the help of Excel. Starting with the key concepts of Excel, such as formulas and functions, this updated second edition will help you to learn all about referencing frameworks and other advanced components for building financial models. As you proceed, you'll explore the advantages of Power Query, learn how to prepare a 3-statement model, inspect your financial projects, build assumptions, and analyze historical data to develop data-driven models and functional growth drivers. Next, you'll learn how to deal with iterations and provide graphical representations of ratios, before covering best practices for effective model testing. Later, you'll discover how to build a model to extract a statement of comprehensive income and financial position, and understand capital budgeting with the help of end-to-end case studies. By the end of this financial modeling Excel book, you'll have examined data from various use cases and have developed the skills you need to build financial models to extract the information required to make informed business decisions.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Financial Modeling Overview
4
Part 2 – The Use of Excel Features and Functions for Financial Modeling
8
Part 3 – Building an Integrated 3-Statement Financial Model with Valuation by DCF
15
Part 4 – Case Study

Circular references

Say you have data in cells A1 to A4 and you type = SUM(A1:A6) in cell A5. This will be flagged by Excel as a circular reference error because you have included the answer cell, A5, in your sum range.

In complex models, you may wish to deliberately create a circular reference for the following reasons.

In the general scheme of things, a company would invest any surplus cash to earn interest. On the other hand, when cash is in overdraft, it will incur interest. If we wanted to expand our model to include this scenario, we would need to extend our cash flow statement to include interest earned or charged on the cash balance. This interest is then subtracted from or added to the existing interest charge in the P&L account, which changes the PAT. Since the PAT is linked to the cash flow statement, this will also result in a change in the closing cash balance, which will affect the interest earned or charged on that balance and the cycle continues, creating...