The importance of Financial Accounting

Hey PE monkeys,

I'm hopefully doing a PE internship this summer, but have not taken any accounting classes. Thus I need to brush up a bit.

I know how a 3-statement model works and its connections etc. Meaning of different line items.

However, I have the opportunity to do a class in Financial Statement Analysis or Financial Accounting. Which would you prefer I did as prep?

Is it essential for a PE analyst to actually have taken classes in Financial Accounting?

Sorry if my question is stupid. Happy new year to ya all

23 Comments
 

Thank you. Your comment is well received.

It is a prerequisite to complete the course, you're correct. But I wouldn't it be more important to analyze and understand financial statements and not necessarily know the rules of producing one - which is something I feel like the financial accounting course is much about.

 

You should take both in all honesty. Sometimes it's not what you don't know that gets you in trouble, it's what you think you know but are actually wrong about. If you already know the material it should be a breeze anyways, right?

 

everyone i've talked to told me financial accounting is the most important class to take during the first two years of college at Southern Cal.

 

To agree with everyone else, financial accounting is absolutely beneficial to a career in banking. I took financial, managerial and advanced financial accounting (no, I was not an accounting major), and the combined knowledge I gained from the classes definitely helped me land my boutique IB internship, and, ultimately, my FT BB role.

While it is not essential by any means, it definitely helps to have a leg up over a lot of the competition, and by knowing financial accounting, you allow the interviewer to ask you more interesting valuation and analytical questions - strong answers to those questions will definitely help you to shine in the interview.

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Wow! I am so glad I asked you guys before making a decision on my own. I had no idea how important it was. Thank you very much!

 

I took financial accounting and as an undergrad interested in finance (assuming you go to a school that does not have a finance major), it is easily one of the more interesting, real-world applicable courses you will take. Definitely beats out micro econ

 
PocketHandkerchiefHow did you go about taking graduate courses as an undergrad though?

No, finance and accounting majors are not offered at the undergrad level at my college. Introductory graduate courses are mostly open to undergrads as well with one caveat being that not all of these courses are accepted by the college towards your degree or major.

While Financial Accounting is important, I think finance is 95% about previous work experience and networking rather than coursework / GPA, so long as you meet the minimum thresholds there.

Edit: I've just come up with a brilliant idea. Since it may not be taken for credit, why would I register for the course and pay $4k? I can just show up and learn things without all the hassle of sitting exams.

 

As far as I know, auditing is very limited to certain disciplines and neither econ nor biz courses are open to auditors. But if classes are large (50+ students,) then one could just blend in. I suppose what really matters is the knowledge gained in the course rather than a letter grade on my transcript.

 

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