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Analyse DuPont×Score Z d'Altman : Prédiction de la faillite d'entreprise×Beneish M-Score : Détection de la manipulation des bénéfices×
DomaineFinanceFinanceFinance
FamilleRegression modelRegression modelRegression model
Année d'origine200819681999
Auteur d'origineDuPont Corporation; SolimanEdward AltmanMessod Beneish
TypeProfitability decomposition frameworkMultiple discriminant analysis scoring modelProbabilistic forensic accounting model
Source fondatriceSoliman, M. T. (2008). The use of DuPont analysis by market participants. The Accounting Review, 83(3), 823–853. DOI ↗Altman, E. I. (1968). Financial ratios, discriminant analysis and the prediction of corporate bankruptcy. The Journal of Finance, 23(4), 589–609. DOI ↗Beneish, M. D. (1999). The detection of earnings manipulation. Financial Analysts Journal, 55(5), 24–36. DOI ↗
AliasDuPont Decomposition, DuPont Identity, Return on Equity Decomposition, DuPont AnaliziAltman's Z-Score Model, Multiple Discriminant Analysis Bankruptcy Model, Z-Score Financial Distress Model, Altman Z-SkoruBeneish Model, M-Score Model, Earnings Manipulation Score, Beneish M-Skoru
Apparentées233
RésuméDuPont Analysis is a financial performance framework that decomposes Return on Equity (ROE) into three multiplicative components: net profit margin, asset turnover, and the equity multiplier. Originally developed by engineers at DuPont Corporation in the early 1920s, the method gained renewed academic prominence through Soliman (2008), who demonstrated that market participants exploit DuPont decompositions to forecast future earnings and to distinguish sustainable from transient profitability.The Altman Z-Score is a linear discriminant model developed by Edward I. Altman in 1968 to predict corporate bankruptcy using five accounting-based financial ratios. Derived through multiple discriminant analysis on a matched sample of 66 US manufacturing firms, the model combines liquidity, profitability, leverage, solvency, and activity ratios into a single composite score that classifies firms as financially sound, distressed, or in a grey zone.The Beneish M-Score is a statistical model developed by Messod Beneish in 1999 to identify whether a company has manipulated its reported earnings. The model combines eight financial-statement ratios into a single composite score using coefficients estimated from a probit regression on a sample of detected earnings manipulators. A score above −2.22 indicates a heightened probability of manipulation, making the M-Score a widely used tool in forensic accounting and investment due-diligence.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: DuPont Analysis · Altman Z-Score · Beneish M-Score. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare