Forecasting Techniques and Financial Modelling

Blog

Blog

Blog

Blog

all posts

tags

Forecasting Techniques and Financial Modelling

by Rickard Warnelid on March 2 2011

Dr Liam Bastick, Director of Corality (Melbourne) was invited to deliver a series of presentations and workshops during the CPA Congress, which was held in New South Wales, Queensland and Tasmania in October 2010.

Presentation: Forecasting Techniques and Financial Modelling

In his presentation, “Forecasting Techniques and Financial Modelling”, Liam Bastick discussed common methods of financial forecasting, difficulties in forecasting and how to assess the accuracy of forecasts.

“It was almost like a stats course, but people seemed to like it! I discussed useful Excel functions that can help management accountants and other finance professionals forecast objectively from historical data” - Liam Bastick

Importance of understanding forecasting methods

Almost all managerial decisions are based on forecasts of future conditions. Managers are required to make decisions under uncertainty about the future. In order to make those decisions, it is necessary to forecast key variables. 

Forecasting is a continuous process. The impact of forecasts on actual performance is measured and the original forecasts are updated.

The choice of forecast models can have a significant impact on the accuracy of forecasts. It is necessary to understand forecasting methods (and their limitations) in order to make reliable and timely business decisions.

Below is an overview of what was covered in the presentation.

Presentation snapshot

Liam’s presentation “Forecasting Techniques and Financial Modelling” offers an overview of the forecasting techniques used industry-wide:

  • Regression analysis
  • Rolling forecasts
  • Simple moving average
  • Weighted moving average

Regression analysis is used to establish linear relationships between variables. It has different applications, such as predicting sales and consumption on the basis of various variables such as advertising and income.

Rolling forecasts allow budgets to be revised on a regular basis throughout the year. They are useful, for example for cash-strapped companies.

Moving averages represent averages over specified consecutive periods, whereby the moving average is “updated” with new information. Weighted moving averages are useful when it is necessary to assign greater weights to more recent events. Some applications of moving averages include inventory costing.

 

Forecasting errors

Common measures of forecast errors, essential in assessing accuracy of forecasts:

  • Mean Squared Error (MSE)
  • Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD)
  • Cumulative Forecast Error (CFE)
  • Mean Absolute Percentage Error (MAPE)

Difficulties encountered in forecasting:

  • Nature of data
  • Historical bias
  • Choosing appropriate forecasting models
  • Validating usefulness and appropriateness of forecasts

Key findings

Make sure to:

  • Understand the applications and limitations of forecasting methods
  • Assess accuracy of forecasts
  • Test and validate models

Download presentation

Click here to view and download a condensed version of the presentation.

COMMENTS

Hi Jessie, please feel free

Hi Jessie, please feel free to send me an email caroline.wiroth@corality.com and we will try and assist you as best as we can.

Caroline

Business Fiance

I am presently studying for a International Masters in Business Administration and would like some assistance/guidance.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

Need a financial model audit?

Need a financial model audit?

Do you want to find our more about our financial model audit services??

Read more about Corality

Upcoming Courses

Best Practice Project Finance Modelling
Sydney
30 May - 31 May 2012
Best Practice Project Finance Modelling
London
11 June - 12 June 2012
Advanced Project Finance Modelling
London
13 June - 14 June 2012

Bloggers

Laura Dean

Laura Dean

Laura is our creative and motivated Marketing Coordinator.

Rickard Warnelid

Rickard Warnelid

Rickard Warnelid is the Managing Director of Corality Financial Group.

Peter Weatherston

Peter Weatherston

Peter is a UK qualified accountant with 10+ years experience in financial modelling and financial model auditing.

Bing Chien Quek

Bing Chien Quek

Bing is Corality's in-house VBA expert. He has worked on numerous projects as well as facilitated VBA training courses internationally.

Caroline Wiroth

Caroline Wiroth

Caroline is Corality’s Marketing Manager. She has over 8 years of experience in sales, marketing and Public Relations.

Tim Heng

Tim Heng

Tim has a wide range of experience in analytics and modelling across a number of different industry sectors (corporate banking, vehicle finance, credit risk and marketing analytics).

Blake McNaughton

Blake McNaughton

Blake McNaughton is an Associate based in Corality’s Head Office in Sydney, Australia.

Haydn Palliser

Haydn Palliser

Haydn is an Associate at Corality with a wealth of experience in structured finance, consulting and is a chartered professional engineer.

Cathryn Fish

Cathryn Fish

Cathryn is our energetic and super organised Training Experience Manager.

Nick Crawley

Nick Crawley

Nick Crawley is the Chairman and Head of Consulting of Corality Financial Group.

Grace Utama

Grace Utama

Grace Utama is a financial modelling expert, with particular expertise in advanced Excel techniques and VBA Macros.

Have a question or comment? We would love to hear from you. More contact options

We respect your email privacy.

Sitemap | Terms | Privacy © Copyright 2012 Corality Financial Group