UIBFS

Certificate in Financial Analysis

INVESTMENT

UGX 1200000.00

DURATION

3 Month/s

START DATES

February, May, August

DELIVERY MODE

Online

ASSESSMENT

Participants perform a full financial analysis of a selected company or project • Written report and presentation to panel

COURSE OVERVIEW

This Certificate in Financial Analysis is a practical, skill-based program designed to equip participants with a comprehensive understanding of how to interpret, analyze, and evaluate financial information for sound business and investment decision-making. Over three months, participants will gain proficiency in analyzing financial statements, assessing performance through ratios, conducting cash flow analysis, and applying valuation techniques. Through a mix of lectures, case studies and hands-on exercises, learners will build the analytical skills and business acumen necessary to support financial decisions in banking, corporate finance, and investment analysis roles

COURSE OBJECTIVE

This Certificate in Financial Analysis is a practical, skill-based program designed to equip participants with a comprehensive understanding of how to interpret, analyze, and evaluate financial information for sound business and investment decision-making. Over three months, participants will gain proficiency in analyzing financial statements, assessing performance through ratios, conducting cash flow analysis, and applying valuation techniques. Through a mix of lectures, case studies and hands-on exercises, learners will build the analytical skills and business acumen necessary to support financial decisions in banking, corporate finance, and investment analysis roles

TARGET AUDIENCE

  • Finance officers, accountants, and analysts
  • Entrepreneurs and business owners

Bankers, investment analysts, and credit officers

WHAT YOU WILL STUDY

Learning topics:

Module one: Introduction to Financial Analysis

·       Purpose and scope of financial analysis

·       Key users of financial analysis: internal vs external

·       Types of financial statements

·       Qualitative vs quantitative analysis

·       Overview of accounting principles

 

Module two: Understanding Financial Statements

·       Income Statement (P&L)

·       Balance Sheet

·       Cash Flow Statement

·       Statement of Changes in Equity

·       Notes to the financial statements

 

Module three: Financial Ratio Analysis

·       Profitability ratios (ROA, ROE, Net Margin)

·       Liquidity ratios (Current Ratio, Quick Ratio)

·       Efficiency ratios (Inventory Turnover, Receivables Turnover)

·       Solvency ratios (Debt to Equity, Interest Coverage)

·       Limitations of ratio analysis

 

Module four: Cash Flow & Working Capital Analysis

·       Operating, investing, and financing activities

·       Free cash flow analysis

·       Working capital cycle

·       Cash flow adequacy and quality

 

Module five: Trend & Comparative Analysis

·       Vertical and horizontal analysis

·       Time-series analysis

·       Benchmarking and peer comparison

·       Common-size financial statements

 

Module six: Financial Forecasting & Budgeting

·       Forecasting income, expenses, and cash flows

·       Budget preparation and variance analysis

·       Sensitivity and scenario analysis

 

Module Seven: Valuation Techniques

·       Overview of valuation methods

·       Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis

·       Market multiples (P/E, EV/EBITDA)

·       Book value and intrinsic value

 

Module eight: Industry & Business Analysis

·       PESTEL and SWOT analysis

·       Business model analysis

·       Competitive positioning (Porter’s Five Forces)

·       ESG considerations in financial analysis

 

LEARNING OUTCOMES

At the end of this course, participants will be able to:

  • Understand and interpret key financial statements including the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement.
  • Apply core financial ratios to assess a company’s profitability, liquidity, efficiency, and solvency.
  • Analyse trends and perform horizontal and vertical analysis to evaluate a firm’s historical performance and financial position.
  • Evaluate cash flow health and working capital dynamics to assess a company’s operational sustainability.
  • Forecast financial performance and construct basic budgets using real-world assumptions and financial data.
  • Apply valuation methods such as Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) and market multiples to estimate business value.
  • Conduct industry and company analysis using PESTEL, SWOT, and Porter’s Five Forces frameworks.

Prepare and present a complete financial analysis report of a real or simulated company, demonstrating synthesis of knowledge acquired.

OPPORTUNITY FOR FURTHER STUDY