2017年最新ACCA考试P4科目考前TIPS分享:

  ACCA P4 Exam Tips December 2017 session given below are just intelligent guesses from exam point of view provided by famous tuition providers. These exam tips must not be relied on totally. To increase chances of success in Exams you must prepare full breadth of syllabus and topics.

  ACCA P4 Exam Tips December 2017:

  ACCA P4 Exam Tips December 2017 Session are given below by famous tuition providers

  Kaplan

  P4 is a technical paper with some complex calculations sometimes but DO NOT think of the exam as numbers-only. There are plenty of discursive parts which are usually easier than the calculations and easy marks can be picked up by applying commercial awareness and common sense.

  Analyse the individual requirements of the question. If you can do the wordy bits first then do so as you will not get bogged down in them like you will with the calculation elements.

  Do not expect to finish a question. You must stick to time, especially on the calculations which are very easy to over-run on. The exam is extremely time pressured and the secret to passing is to have a go at every part of every question, not to try and get 100% on every question – to do that you would need about 7 hours!

  If you are not sure what to do with a particular figure in a question, ignore it and move on – state assumptions, you haven’t got time to worry about it!

  If you get a Black-Scholes question, always list out the input variables as your first stage and assign the relevant values to them – there will be about 2-3 marks usually for doing this.

  Practice as many questions as possible but do as many as possible to time. You must get used to doing the questions in the time available and not spending too long on them.

  Practice as many questions as possible across the syllabus, and don’t only concentrate on what you consider to be the core areas.

  Choose carefully on section B of the paper – it is very limited choice but nonetheless it will be critical.

  Do not put down unnecessary workings; because as it will cost you heavily in lost time.

  If there is a calculation that you are unable to complete – for e.g. a WACC which prevents you from going on to do the NPV, then just make a reasonable assumption and estimate a WACC which you have been unable to calculate, this will then allow you to progress the calculation and get on to the often more generously rewarded discursive parts of the question.

  Look out for examinable articles – two in particular for June 2011:

  24 August – The new examiner Shishir Malde gives his approach for the P4 paper

  23 September – Another article by the new examiner Shishir Malde on Risk Management January/February article

  Two key topics are always NPV appraisal and capital structure, particularly CAPM and Betas. You will not pass if that is all you know but you will struggle to pass if you do not know them!

  BPP

  Important areas to cover include:

  Q1

  We would expect section A questions to be mainly based on core syllabus areas such as:

  project appraisal (domestic or overseas) and business valuations; both of these areas are

  likely to include cost of capital calculations. Risk management may also feature as an aspect

  of this question in a number of different ways e.g. VaR, real options, hedging, risk mapping.

  Q2-4

  risk management (currency or interest rate)

  business re-organisation

  real options

  General advice:

  The 50 mark compulsory question will, inevitably, draw from a number of different syllabus

  areas. The examiner has said that he does not plan exams by referring to past exams (i.e.

  checking that the whole syllabus is being tested over the course of a number of exam

  sittings).

  These factors mean that question spotting extremely difficult for this paper. However we

  would expect section A questions to test core syllabus areas as listed above.

  In section B one of the questions may be entirely discussion based (but this is not

  guaranteed from June 2013), and often involves ethical and general financing issues (e.g.

  dividend policy).

  Behavioural finance is new to the syllabus from September 2016; the examiner has recently

  written an article on this area – so it is an important area for you to understand.

  Remember that this paper is not a maths exam – in all exam questions the examiner is

  interested in your ability to communicate well and to give good management advice that

  relates to the scenario in the question.

  Keep checking the ACCA website for articles written by the P4 examiner in the lead up to the

  exam, these are often tested. An article on currency swaps has recently been published.