COURSE NUMBER: MBA223.2
COURSE TITLE: Corporate
Financial Reporting
UNITS OF CREDIT: 3 units
INSTRUCTOR: Maria E. Nondorf
E-MAIL ADDRESS: nondorf@haas.berkeley.edu
CLASS WEB PAGE LOCATION:
http://catalyst.haas.berkeley.edu
MEETING DAY(S)/TIME: Tuesday and Thursday, 11:00 AM –
12:30 PM
PREREQUISITE(S): MBA 202
CLASS FORMAT:
Each topic will be introduced
using a lecture/discussion format. The material will be illustrated by reference
to actual financial statements and by solving one or more basic problems. We
will then use a combination of cases, articles, and more sophisticated problems
to solidify your understanding of the concepts and to enhance your ability to
analyze the relevant financial statement disclosures.
REQUIRED READINGS:
Course reader (a textbook is
supplemental [White, Sondhi, and Fried, Analysis
and Use of Financial Statements, Third Edition, Wiley, 2003])
BASIS FOR FINAL GRADE:
ABSTRACT OF COURSE’S CONTENT
AND OBJECTIVES:
The objective of this course
is to provide you with the skills to become a sophisticated reader and user of
corporate financial statements. As such,
the focus will be on understanding and analyzing the statements and supporting
notes, rather than on preparing them.
Given today’s economic environment, the power to understand complex
transactions will be enhanced by your ability to analyze the accounting for
these transactions. Through this course,
you will be able to effectively utilize accounting data as an important source
of information about a company and its business activities. The four general themes of the course are (1)
Accounting Information and its Interaction with Economic Performance; (2)
Accounting and the Scope of the Firm; (3) The Role of Accounting in Financing
and Risk Management Decisions; and (4) Financial Reporting and Corporate
Governance. Topics to be covered include
the quality of earnings and earnings management, the accounting and reporting
of mergers and acquisitions, off-balance sheet arrangements (including leases
and pensions), derivatives and hedging, Sarbanes-Oxley, and stock options and
other incentives.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH:
Professor Nondorf joined the
faculty at the Haas School of Business from the