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CMA Final SFM — ABC Analysis & Complete Exam Guide
Deep, exam-oriented preparation plan for Strategic Financial Management (Paper 14) — syllabus 2022. Includes step-by-step solved examples, case studies, formula sheet, and last-day exam tactics designed for CMA Final students.
Why SFM Matters — A Short Overview
Strategic Financial Management (SFM) is a synthesis subject requiring both strong conceptual clarity and numerical proficiency. This paper tests capital budgeting, portfolio & security valuation, derivatives, risk and forex management, and modern digital finance practices. Employers value CMAs who can combine theoretical frameworks (CAPM, NPV, Sharpe Ratio) with practical tools (forwards, options, swaps) to create real-world solutions.
Syllabus Snapshot (ICMAI 2022) & Weightage
Below is a condensed syllabus view highlighting the most exam-relevant areas and their approximate weightage.
| Section | Key Topics | Approx Weightage |
|---|---|---|
| Investment Decisions | Capital budgeting (NPV, IRR, Risk analysis, Real options), Leasing, Securitization | 22–26% |
| Security Analysis & Portfolio Management | Equity & bond valuation, Portfolio theory, CAPM, APT, Mutual funds, Performance evaluation | 30–36% |
| Financial Risk Management | Derivatives: forwards, futures, options, swaps; Interest rate derivatives; Hedging strategies | 18–22% |
| International Financial Management | Forex markets, Exchange rate determination, Risk management (forwards, options), Country risk | 12–16% |
| Digital Finance & Governance | Fintech fundamentals, digital payment ecosystems, governance & regulatory aspects | 3–6% |
ABC Analysis — Prioritise What Gives Marks
Use ABC analysis to plan time and effort. This is a practical triage that most toppers use:
- A (High Priority): Portfolio theory, CAPM, Bond valuation, Capital budgeting (NPV, IRR, risk adjustments), Futures & Options basics. (Spend ~45% of your time here).
- B (Medium Priority): ETFs, Mutual funds, APT, Interest rate derivatives, Intro to forex hedging. (Spend ~30% of time).
- C (Low Priority): Securitization, leasing details, digital finance governance, some theoretical models. (Quick revision & answer frameworks).
Phase-wise 12-Week Study Plan (Exam-Oriented)
Here’s a practical plan you can implement. This plan assumes you have ~12 weeks before the exam and about 4–6 hours/day on average. Adjust proportionally if you have less time.
| Phase | Duration | Main Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 — Conceptual Foundation | Weeks 1–4 | ICMAI theory, core formulae, simple numericals |
| Phase 2 — Application & Problem Practice | Weeks 5–8 | 100+ numerical problems, topicwise timed tests |
| Phase 3 — Mocks & Revision | Weeks 9–12 | Full mocks, weak area focus, formula sheet finalisation |
Daily / Weekly Routine (Sample)
- Daily: 90–120 minutes of numerical practice + 30–45 minutes theory reading. End day with formula flashcards.
- Weekly: 1 full timed section test + 2 topic tests (mix theory & numerical).
- Mocks: From week 9, do 1 full mock every 4–5 days; analyze and fix weaknesses immediately.
Core Topics Explained (with solved illustrations)
1. Capital Budgeting under Risk — NPV & Adjustments
Key ideas: NPV and IRR remain central. Under risk, use risk-adjusted discount rates or Certainty Equivalent (CE) approach. Understand project cash flows with sensitivity and scenario analysis.
Sample problem — NPV with risk adjustment
Problem: Project requires Rs. 10,00,000 initial investment. Expected cash flows: Year1 = 3,50,000; Year2 = 3,80,000; Year3 = 4,50,000. Risk-free rate = 6%, project beta = 1.1; market risk premium = 8%. Calculate NPV using CAPM as discount rate. Assume no salvage value.
CAPM ke r = rf + beta * market_premium = 6% + 1.1*8% = 6% + 8.8% = 14.8% NPV = -10,00,000 + 3,50,000/(1+0.148)^1 + 3,80,000/(1+0.148)^2 + 4,50,000/(1+0.148)^3 Compute PVs: PV1 = 3,50,000 / 1.148 = 3,50,000 / 1.148 ≈ 3,048,778 PV2 = 3,80,000 / (1.148^2) ≈ 3,80,000 / 1.318 ≈ 2,883,128 PV3 = 4,50,000 / (1.148^3) ≈ 4,50,000 / 1.513 ≈ 2,974,357 NPV ≈ -10,00,000 + 3,04,878 + 2,88,313 + 2,97,436 = 88,627 (positive)
Interpretation: Positive NPV (~Rs. 88.6k) => Accept. In exam, show full working and state assumption of CAPM usage.
2. CAPM & Beta — Simple Worked Example
Formula: Expected return E(Ri) = Rf + βi (E(Rm) − Rf).
Example: Rf = 6%, E(Rm)=14%, β = 1.2 E(Ri)=6% + 1.2*(14% − 6%) = 6% + 1.2*8% = 6% + 9.6% = 15.6%
In answers mention limitations: single factor model assumption, market proxy issues, estimation error in beta.
3. Portfolio Theory — Two-Asset Portfolio & Minimum Variance
Key formulas: Portfolio expected return & variance for two assets:
E(Rp) = w1*E(R1) + w2*E(R2) Var(Rp) = w1^2*σ1^2 + w2^2*σ2^2 + 2*w1*w2*Cov12 Cov12 = ρ12*σ1*σ2
Exam strategy: Show stepwise derivation, compute weights for minimum variance portfolio if required, and explain diversification benefits.
4. Bond Valuation & Yield Measures
Basic formula for a coupon bond price:
Price = Σ (Coupon / (1+y)^t) + (Face / (1+y)^n)
Practice: YTM calculation (trial & interpolation) and duration (Macaulay duration) — always show workings and units (years).
5. Derivatives — Futures, Forwards, Options (Basics + Hedging)
Key formulas and examable points:
- Futures price on non-dividend paying stock: F = S(1 + r)^T
- Option payoff: Call max(0, S−K), Put max(0, K−S)
- Hedging example: Use forward contract to lock exchange rates for imports/exports.
Simple option payoff diagram explanation (explain in words for exam)
Always sketch payoff table and explain scenarios (in-the-money, at-the-money, out-of-the-money).
6. International Finance — Forwards & Forex Risk Management
Explain uncovered vs covered interest parity briefly and show forward rate formula when asked:
Forward rate ≈ Spot * (1 + domestic interest) / (1 + foreign interest)
Exam tip: For forex questions, always state whether you are using direct or indirect quotes and show hedging alternatives (forwards, money market hedge, options) with pros & cons.
7. Digital Finance — Short but Important
Cover the fintech ecosystem (payments, wallets, UPI, digital lending basics) and governance (data privacy, RBI/SEBI guidelines). Keep this crisp — examiners ask conceptual questions here.
Extended Case Studies (Exam-Style Answers)
Case Study 1 — Capital Budgeting with Risk Scenarios
Scenario: Company X evaluating a 4-year project. Management presents base, optimistic and pessimistic cash flows. Asked to compute NPV under base and perform sensitivity for discount rate ±2%.
Exam approach: Compute base NPV clearly, present sensitivity table (NPV under r−2% and r+2%), conclude on accept/reject and comment on risk exposure and contingency actions.
Case Study 2 — Portfolio Construction (Exam question)
Scenario: Given expected returns, variances and correlation for two securities, formulate a 2-asset efficient portfolio and find weights for minimum variance.
Exam approach: Use formula for w* = (σ2^2 − Cov)/(σ1^2 + σ2^2 − 2Cov). Show numeric substitution, explain risk-return tradeoff and diversification benefit in 2–3 lines.
Case Study 3 — Forex Exposure Hedging
Present a company importing goods with payables in USD in 6 months. Compare forward hedging vs money market hedge vs option hedge. Provide numerical cost comparison (use forward rate given) and recommend based on cost and risk profile.
Case Study 4 — Using Options to Hedge Commodity Price Risk
Explain use of buying a put or selling a call, illustrate payoff table and net cost (premium), and comment on effectiveness and opportunity cost.
Case Study 5 — Interest Rate Swap Example
Outline fixed-for-floating swap between two parties — compute net cashflows for a sample period and explain how swap reduces exposure for each counterparty.
Case Study 6 — Mutual Fund Performance Evaluation
Given fund returns vs benchmark and standard deviation, compute Sharpe Ratio and Jensen’s alpha (if CAPM beta provided). Discuss fund manager skill vs market movements.
Practice Problems (High-Yield Types)
- Compute NPV and IRR for a 3-year project with changing cash flows; comment on reinvestment assumption differences.
- Given S, K, r, T — compute forward price and option payoff at expiry for call and put.
- Given two stocks with returns and correlation, compute portfolio expected return and variance for a given pair of weights.
- Given bond coupons and price — compute current yield, yield to maturity (by interpolation), and Macaulay duration.
- Given spot and forward exchange rates and domestic/foreign interest rates — test covered interest parity and present arbitrage opportunity if parity violated.
Answering tip: Always write assumptions and final boxed answers. Partial marks are awarded for correct approach even if arithmetic has minor errors.
📘 CMA Final SFM — 30 Must-Know Formulas with Worked Examples
This master table packs the most exam-relevant formulas across Investment Decisions, Portfolio & Valuation, Bonds, Derivatives, Risk & Forex. Each row shows the formula, a simple example, and a worked solution so students can revise and apply quickly.
| Topic | Formula | Example Inputs | Solution (Rounded) |
|---|---|---|---|
| NPV | NPV = Σ (CFt/(1+r)t) − I0 | I₀ = ₹100,000; CF = ₹30,000 × 5 yrs; r = 10% | PV inflows ≈ ₹113,724 ⇒ NPV ≈ ₹13,724 (Accept) |
| IRR (Interpolation) | Discount rate that makes NPV = 0 | Same CFs as (1) | IRR ≈ 15.24% |
| Profitability Index | PI = PV(Inflows)/I₀ | PV inflows = ₹113,724; I₀ = ₹100,000 | PI ≈ 1.137 > 1 ⇒ Accept |
| Payback | Time to recover I₀ (undiscounted) | I₀ = ₹100,000; CF = ₹30,000/yr | Payback = 3.33 yrs (≈ 3 yrs 4 months) |
| Discounted Payback | Time to recover I₀ using discounted CFs | r = 10%; same CFs | Cum PV at Y4 ≈ ₹95,096; balance ₹4,904; Y5 PV = ₹18,628 ⇒ 4.26 yrs |
| Equivalent Annual Annuity (EAA) | EAA = NPV × [r / (1 − (1+r)−n)] | NPV = ₹13,724; r = 10%; n = 5 | EAA ≈ ₹3,620/yr |
| WACC | WACC = wdkd(1−T) + weke | wd=40%, kd=9%, T=30%; we=60%, ke=13% | WACC ≈ 10.32% |
| CAPM (Cost of Equity) | ke = Rf + β(E[Rm] − Rf) | Rf=6%; E[Rm]=12%; β=1.2 | ke = 13.2% |
| Beta from Covariance | β = Cov(Ri,Rm)/Var(Rm) | Cov = 0.018; Var(Rm) = 0.025 | β = 0.72 |
| Gordon Growth (DDM) | P₀ = D₁/(ke − g) | D₁ = ₹5; ke=12%; g=4% | P₀ = ₹62.50 |
| Sustainable Growth | g = b × ROE | Retention b = 0.60; ROE = 15% | g = 9% |
| Bond Price | P = Σ C/(1+y)t + FV/(1+y)n | FV=₹1000; C=₹100; y=8%; n=3 | P ≈ ₹1,051.54 |
| Current Yield | CY = Coupon/P | Coupon = ₹100; P = ₹1,051.54 | CY ≈ 9.51% |
| YTM (Approximation) | YTM ≈ [C + (FV−P)/n] / [(FV+P)/2] | C=₹100; FV=₹1000; P=₹1,051.54; n=3 | YTM ≈ 8.08% (close to 8%) |
| Macaulay Duration | D = [Σ t×PV(CFt)]/P | 2-yr bond, C=₹100, FV=₹1000, y=10% | D ≈ 1.909 years |
| Modified Duration | Dmod = D/(1+y) | D = 1.909; y = 10% | Dmod ≈ 1.736 |
| Portfolio Return | E(Rp) = Σ wiRi | w = [0.4, 0.6]; R = [15%, 10%] | E(Rp) = 12% |
| Portfolio Variance (2 assets) | σp² = w₁²σ₁² + w₂²σ₂² + 2w₁w₂ρσ₁σ₂ | w=[0.4,0.6]; σ=[18%,12%]; ρ=0.25 | Var ≈ 0.01296 ⇒ σp ≈ 11.38% |
| Min-Variance Weight | w₁* = (σ₂² − Cov₁₂)/(σ₁² + σ₂² − 2Cov₁₂) | σ₁=20%, σ₂=15%, ρ=0.3 ⇒ Cov=0.009 | w₁* ≈ 0.303 (w₂* ≈ 0.697) |
| Sharpe Ratio | S = (Rp − Rf)/σp | Rp=12%; Rf=6%; σ=10% | S = 0.60 |
| Treynor Ratio | T = (Rp − Rf)/β | Rp=12%; Rf=6%; β=1.2 | T = 0.05 (5%) |
| Jensen’s Alpha | α = Rp − [Rf + β(Rm − Rf)] | Rp=13%; Rf=6%; Rm=12%; β=1.1 | Expected = 12.6% ⇒ α = 0.4% |
| Futures Price (no income) | F₀ = S₀(1+r)T | S₀=₹500; r=8%; T=0.5 yr | F₀ ≈ ₹519.62 |
| Covered IRP (Forward) | F₀ = S₀ × (1+rD)/(1+rF) | S₀=₹75/$; rD=8%; rF=4% | F₀ ≈ ₹77.88/$ |
| Forward Premium % (annualised) | %Prem ≈ [(F−S)/S] × (12/n) × 100 | S=₹75; F=₹77.88; n=12 months | ≈ 3.84% p.a. |
| Call Payoff | max(0, ST − K) | K=₹500; ST=₹550 | ₹50 (ignore premium in payoff) |
| Put Payoff | max(0, K − ST) | K=₹500; ST=₹460 | ₹40 |
| Put–Call Parity | C − P = S₀ − K e−rT | S₀=100; K=95; r=5%; T=0.5 | RHS ≈ 7.346 |
| Black–Scholes (Call) | C = S₀N(d₁) − K e−rTN(d₂) | S₀=100; K=95; r=5%; T=0.5; N(d₁)=0.6368; N(d₂)=0.5596 | C ≈ ₹11.83 |
| Value at Risk (VaR) | VaR = Z × σp × √t × V | Z=1.65; σp=2%; t=1 day; V=₹10,00,000 | VaR ≈ ₹33,000 |
Exam use: Write the formula first, show substitutions clearly, and box the final answer. Where assumptions apply (e.g., compounding, quotation basis, tax), state them explicitly for method marks.
Essential Formula Sheet (Keep Printed)
Valuation
- PV = CF/(1+r)^t
- NPV = Σ PV(CFt) − Initial Investment
- IRR solves Σ CFt/(1+IRR)^t = 0
CAPM & Portfolio
- CAPM: E(Ri)=Rf+βi(E(Rm)−Rf)
- Portfolio: E(Rp)=Σ wi*E(Ri)
- Var(Rp)=Σ wi^2σi^2 + 2Σ Σ wiwjCovij
Bond & Yields
- Price = Σ C/(1+y)^t + FV/(1+y)^n
- Duration = Σ t*(PV(CFt))/Price
Derivatives & Forex
- Futures on non-dividend stock: F = S(1+r)^T
- Option payoff: Call = max(S−K,0), Put = max(K−S,0)
- Forward ≈ Spot*(1+rd)/(1+rf)
How to Attempt the SFM Exam Paper — Practical Tactics
- Read the paper carefully (first 8–10 minutes): Identify compulsory questions, mark high-weight numerical ones and allocate time.
- Attempt A-category questions first: Secure high-mark numericals early when you’re fresh.
- Show workings clearly: Examiners award method marks. Use headings, show formula, substitution, and final boxed answer.
- State assumptions: E.g., “Using CAPM to estimate discount rate” or “Assuming continuous compounding” where relevant.
- Time allocation: For a 100 mark paper: numericals (60 marks): ~2 hours; theory & case (40 marks): ~1 hour. Keep 10–15 minutes for revision.
- If stuck: Attempt partial steps; even partial correct computations earn marks. Do not leave blanks.
Common Mistakes to Avoid & Toppers’ Tips
Common Mistakes
- Not writing down assumptions — examiners penalize ambiguous answers.
- Poor time management — spending excessive time on a single question.
- Skipping simple questions thinking they’re low weight — easy marks lost.
- Weak presentation — messy steps lead to lost method marks.
Topper Tips (Practical & Actionable)
- Make a one-pager formula & concept sheet and revise it daily in final 15 days.
- Solve past 10 years’ questions and categorize repeated question types.
- When preparing numericals, time yourself — speed with accuracy matters.
- Maintain a “common mistakes” log from mocks and avoid repeating them.
- Study in groups for 2 hours weekly to discuss case approaches and get peer feedback.
30-Day Revision Checklist (Final Month)
- Days 1–10: Rapid revision of A topics (Portfolio, CB, Derivatives) + 2 practice numericals/day.
- Days 11–20: Past paper solving under timed conditions (alternate days full paper, alternate days topic tests).
- Days 21–28: Formula sheet revision, light topic skim for B & C areas, practice weak-topic problems.
- Last 2 Days: Rest lightly; revise one-page formula sheet and answer frameworks; organise exam day kit.
FAQ — Quick Answers
A: Typically 4–6 numericals covering 50–70 marks combined; but always be ready for mixed case-numerical questions.
A: Yes — theory forms 30–40% of marks and is essential for case answers and explaining choices (e.g., hedging vs speculation).
A: Understand derivations for frequent formulas (NPV, CAPM, portfolio variance) but keep a memorised one-pager for quick recall.
Recommended Resources & How to Use Them
- ICMAI Study Material: Primary — read chapter introductions and solved examples.
- Past Exam Papers (last 10 years): Solve and classify questions by topic.
- Standard Texts: Bodie, Kane & Marcus (for investments), Hull (for derivatives) — use selectively for conceptual clarity.
- Online Mock Tests: Time-simulated mocks to build exam temperament.
Final Words — Motivation & Mindset
Strategic Financial Management rewards disciplined practice and logical thinking. Your target should be clarity first, speed second. Practice the high-frequency numerical types until you can solve them cleanly in under 20–25 minutes each. Keep a calm mindset on exam day — confidence plus clarity = marks.
Remember: Most students fail to convert knowledge into marks because of poor presentation and time management. Fix these two and you’ll be ahead of many.

