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    ISSUES IN ACCOUNTING EDUCATION American Accounting AssociationVol. 28, No. 1 DOI: 10.2308/iace-103292013pp. 197198

    Book ReviewsMichael K. Shaub, Editor

    The policy ofIssues in Accounting Education is to publish only those reviews

    solicited by the Book Reviews Editor. Unsolicited reviews will not be ac-

    cepted.

    STEPHEN H. PENMAN, Financial Statement Analysis and Security Valuation, 5th

    edition, International edition (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2013, ISBN: 978-0-073-37966-1, pp. v, 740).

    I have been using Steve Penmans Financial Statement Analysis and Security Valuation in

    various specialized masters courses for over ten years now. For a whole set of accounting

    academics initiated to the residual income model during their own advanced studies, Penman offers

    a natural textbook to accentuate the link between financial statements and valuation to their own

    students. Being an accomplished academic himself, he links in his book the rich literature on

    financial statement analysis research to the practical dimensions of accounting, financial, and

    prospective analysis. The book adopts first and foremost a fundamental equity analyst perspective,

    nevertheless closing off with a section on credit risk. The material covered is not light beer but the

    real stuff; however, I have found it is well received by those who are looking to pursue a career inaccounting and finance and are wanting serious training.

    The book is structured in five parts: (1) Financial Statements and Valuation; (2) The Analysis

    of Financial Statements; (3) Forecasting and Valuation Analysis; (4 ) Accounting Analysis and

    Valuation; and (5) The Analysis of Risk and Return. Nevertheless, one can easily follow different

    paths; I generally start with the analysis of financial statements and performance before introducing

    accounting in the valuation models. I find it easier convincing students already quite familiar with

    dividend discount and discounted cash-flow models of the merits of the residual income model by

    linking it to the detailed decomposition we have just done of ROE and ROA. The book adopts a

    more contemporary approach to breaking down ROE that clearly distinguishes between operating

    and financing activities, diverging from the classic Dupont Analysis that mixes things up.

    The instructor center is quite useful with expected teaching notes, PowerPoint slides, test bank,

    and chapter notes. In addition, the accounting clinics are quite appreciated by students wanting to

    review their financial accounting if it has been a while since their undergraduate courses, or to

    examine some issues in more detail (e.g., pensions, income taxes, equity investments, business

    combinations, stock compensation).

    The new edition has not undergone any revolutionary change. It includes more current

    examples, exercises, and cases (I would encourage updating industry benchmarks, e.g., Table 12.2).

    There has been a slight reorganization of the Financial Statement and Valuation section by

    desegregating the reverse engineering material in a specific chapter which is useful as a

    self-contained reference when giving students such an exercise to do, as I have always done. Last,

    the revised chapter on simple forecasting should make it easier for students to cover the topic if the

    course does not get into more complex models.

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    While the book does briefly discuss differences between U.S. GAAP and IFRS, using the book

    in an IFRS environment, like I have in the U.K. and France, does require an investment. Like most

    internationalversions of U.S. books, it remains at its core U.S. centric in its in-text examples

    (e.g., Nike), or its proposed exercises (e.g., GE, IBM, General Mills) and cases (e.g., Kimberly

    Clark). Further, market and industry benchmarks presented are all U.S. One needs to bring in local

    examples, benchmarks, and further discuss U.S. GAAPIFRS differences to make a course truly

    international.

    Nevertheless, this is the perfect book for a serious course (or courses) in financial statement

    analysis and equity valuation for students wanting to obtain the required tools for rigorous

    fundamental analysis. The rich content is difficult to cover in a single term, although it is easy to

    pick and choose relevant chapters if one does not have the luxury of two courses.

    PAUL ANDRE

    Professor and Co-Director ESSEC KPMG Financial Reporting Center

    ESSEC Business School

    198 Book Reviews

    Issues in Accounting Education

    Volume 28, No. 1, 2013