Oracle HFM Beginner's Guide Part I
Oracle HFM Beginner's Guide Part I
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Why HFM
Ø Process management for tight control of the review and approval process
Ø Data Validation
• Intercompany Transactions
• Minority Interest
Product Architecture
TASK DESCRIPTION
Load and add data To add data to your application by loading it from a file
and by using data forms.
Calculate After enter data, you can run calculation rules to
populate calculated accounts.
Adjust data After you calculate data, you can adjust the data by
using journals that provide an audit trail of your
adjustments.
Translate and After data for individual business units is entered and
consolidate data adjusted, you can translate and consolidate the data.
Ø Deliver accurate and timely reports to both internal management and external
regulatory bodies.
Ø Discover sources of profitability and cash flow at the company, product, brand,
and customer levels.
• Process management for tight control of the review and approval process.
• Data validation.
• Currency translation to support multiple local currencies.
• Automatic eliminations for intercompany transactions.
Principles-based
10K- 10Q
The 10-K explains the company's business activities for the most recent twelve-
month operating period. The 10-K, which is required to be filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) within 90 days of the company's fiscal year end,
typically contains more detail than an annual report, such as more thorough
operating and financial statistics, information on legal proceedings, and
management compensation.
Form 100Qs a quarterly version of the 10-K; however, it is less detailed and
generally unaudited. The SEC requires publicly traded companies to file form 10-
Q within 45 days of the end of each quarter, except the final quarter, in which the
10-K is filed.
Year Dimension
The Year dimension represents the fiscal or calendar year for data. An application
can contain data for more than one year. You specify a year range when you create
the application and select a year from the Year dimension to process data.
Period Dimension
The Period dimension represents time periods, such as quarters and months. It
contains time periods and frequencies by displaying the time periods in a
hierarchy. For example, if the Actual scenario maintains data on a monthly basis,
generally 12 periods of data are available for this scenario in a year. Financial
Management supports years, months, and weeks for the period dimension. It does
not support days for the dimension.
Account Dimension
The Account dimension represents a hierarchy of natural accounts. Accounts store
financial data for entities and scenarios in an application. Each account has a type,
such as Revenue or Expense that defines its accounting behavior.
You define attributes for Account dimension members, such as the account type,
the number of decimal places to display, and whether the account is a calculated,
consolidated, or intercompany partner account.
Intercompany Dimension
The Intercompany dimension represents all intercompany balances that exist for
an account. This is a reserved dimension that is used in combination with the
Account dimension and any custom dimension. Financial Management can track
and eliminate intercompany transaction details across accounts and entities. You
can also run intercompany matching reports to view intercompany transactions.
Custom Dimensions
Four custom dimensions are available for analysis of detailed data. You can use
custom dimensions to store additional details associated with accounts, such as
products, markets, channels, balance sheet movement, or types of elimination. For
example, custom dimensions could include Product Line, Region, Channel, or
Customers.
Dimensions
You create metadata for applications by defining dimensions. Dimensions
describe your organization’s data. Examples of dimensions are Account, Entity,
and Period. The elements that comprise a dimension are called members. For
example, GrossMargin and TotalRevenues are members of the Account
dimension.
Dimension Hierarchies
Members of a dimension are arranged in hierarchies. Upper-level members are
called parent members, and a member immediately below a parent member is
referred to as its child. All members below a parent are referred to as descendants.
The bottom-level members of the hierarchy are called base-level members. The
illustration in the slide shows a part of the dimension hierarchy of the Account
dimension. In this hierarchy, the Total Revenues member is a child of Gross
Margin. Sales, Other Revenues, Salaries, Total Revenues, and Total Costs are
descendants of Gross Margin. Sales, Other Revenues, and Salaries are base-level
members.
After loading or entering data into base level entities we run a consolidation for a
selected scenario or period to aggregate data throughout the organization.
After Consolidate
When you consolidate an entity, the processes are required for the descendants of
the entity run automatically.
• Calculation rules are run for all descendants of the entity for the period
being consolidate and for all prior periods
• If the data for the children & parent entities are in different currencies the
data is translated based on the exchange rate.
FINANCIAL CLOSING