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Arcelor Mittal Accounting System Analysis

Arcelor Mittal Accounting System Analysis. Ana Cervantes Yu Chen Anne Dubost Francesca De Girolamo Melvin Soh. Overview. Iron & Steel Industry Growing demand 4 Risk of overcapacity and regional imbalances Oligopoly Market 5 Low Margin 6 Standard Product 7 Complicated Process 8.

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Arcelor Mittal Accounting System Analysis

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  1. Arcelor MittalAccounting System Analysis Ana Cervantes Yu Chen Anne Dubost Francesca De Girolamo Melvin Soh

  2. Overview Iron & Steel Industry • Growing demand4 • Risk of overcapacity and regional imbalances • Oligopoly Market5 • Low Margin6 • Standard Product7 • Complicated Process8 Company • World's number one steel company1 • Merger between Arcelor and Mittal Steel in 2006 • Strategy • Product diversity2 • Integrated business model • Geographic reach3 • Based on subsidiarity • Investments & Innovation

  3. Divisionalized Organization Six divisions based on geography and products1 Under each division, there are subsidiary companies2 Each subsidiary company is owned by ArcelorMittal in different percentages3 Intercompany shipments and transactions Possible performance indicator: ROI4 Other indicators: Profit, Net margin, Production, Shipment, Number of Employees 3

  4. Costing system1 cost + profit = price AIM Process costing (rather than job costing)2 → cost per unit of output (€/tons ?) Target costing3 Starting point: target selling price (fixed by the market) Profit Margin determined by corporate decision Target cost deducted from the calculation → : future actual cost < target cost 4

  5. Responsibility centres Cost Centres1 • Discretionary: HR, raw material purchasing • Standard: product lines, factories • different levels of aggregation2 • Problem: unify criteria and centralised decisions and control3 Revenue centres: regional sales divisions4 Profit and Investment centres: highest levels of management5 5

  6. Costs Allocation1 R&D activities expenditures • Materials, direct labour, allocated overheads2 • To income statement as incurred3 • To corresponding cost centres (divisions, factories) if:4 • Technical and commercial viability • Enough resources • Cost drivers:5 • New or substantially improved product: volume6 • New or substantially improved process: machine-hours7 6

  7. Volume decision • Volume decision is easier for big players • Influence in price setting • Geographic and product diversity provides hedge against economic cycle and regional imbalance • Long term contracts • Inelastic demand in short term3 Oligopoly with no obvious dominant firm1 Follows the Kinked Demand Curve Model2 Different situation for different market segments (e.g. Automobile) 7

  8. Investment Decisions • The Arcelor Mittal Strategy is focused on its investments’ policy. • Investments’ aims: • Increase scale and synergies • Increase annual revenues • Low cost profile and high growth prospects from developing markets • Leading position across a range of key product segments • Ability to supply customers on a global basis • Increase the dividends • Reduced volatility through geographic and product diversification • Security of long-term contracts through high value-added products • Reach the market leadership 8

  9. Investment evaluation criteria • Strategic investments with high ROIC: return on invested capital1 • The capacity of the investment for increasing the ROIC is evaluated through the NPV2. • Each investment is evaluated on the base of its own profitability3. • Qualitative aspects are also fundamental4.

  10. Conclusions • Why ArcelorMittal1 • Big multinational company (merger) • Cost cutting programme going on • Possible accounting features proposed • Divisionalized organization (intersectional sales) • Cost allocation: Process costing (factories) • Pricing strategy: Target costing • Different responsibility centres at different levels of the organization • Volume decision based on external environment (steel market price) • Investments seeking synergy 10

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