This article defines Financial Modeling as the process of creating a mathematical representation of a company’s financial performance, typically in spreadsheet form, to support decision-making (valuation, budgeting, capital allocation). Core models: (1) three-statement model (income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement linked), (2) discounted cash flow (DCF) (intrinsic valuation based on future cash flows), (3) leveraged buyout (LBO) (acquisition funding), (4) merger model (accretion/dilution analysis). The article addresses: objectives of financial modeling; key concepts including free cash flow, weighted average cost of capital (WACC), and terminal value; core mechanisms such as historical data input, driver-based forecasting, and scenario analysis; international comparisons and debated issues (model risk, overfitting, Excel vs specialized software); summary and emerging trends (automated modeling, cloud collaboration, AI-assisted projections); and a Q&A section.
This article describes financial modeling without endorsing specific software. Objectives commonly cited: valuing businesses, assessing investment returns, and supporting strategic decisions.
Key terminology:
Typical DCF steps:
Model structure best practices:
Forecasting drivers (examples):
Scenario analysis (three cases):
Debated issues:
Summary: Financial models link three statements to project future performance. DCF values a business based on discounted free cash flows. Sensitivity analysis explores key assumptions. Model quality depends on logical structure and transparent assumptions.
Emerging trends:
Q1: How detailed should a financial model be?
A: Detail proportional to purpose. Quick valuation may use 3-5 line items; operational budgeting may require 50+ line items. Balance complexity with usability.
Q2: What is the difference between unlevered and levered free cash flow?
A: Unlevered FCF (before interest) used in DCF for enterprise value. Levered FCF (after interest) used for equity valuation.
Q3: Why do models need a circularity breaker?
A: Interest income/expense depends on cash balance, which depends on net income, which depends on interest. Circular reference may not converge without iterative calculation or circularity breaker (e.g., average debt method).
https://www.cfainstitute.org/ethics/model-risk
https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/financial-modeling/
https://www.wallstreetprep.com/knowledge/financial-modeling/