CMA Part 2 – Your Syllabus in a Nutshell
Now that you've mastered CMA Part 1 thanks to our syllabus breakdown, it's time to deep dive into all the intricacies of CMA Part 2.

Similar to Part 1 of the Certified Management Accounting exam, CMA Part 2 has a less than ideal pass rate. The average CMA pass rate for part 2 is just 50%, which means half of the candidates who sit for this exam will have to retake it.

To help you join the half that does succeed — and hopefully, help you pass the CMA exam on your first try — let's talk more about Part 2 and what it entails.

Skills Required to Pass CMA Part 2
As I outlined in our post on Part 1, CMA Part 2 requires candidates to have a level C understanding of all Content Specification Outlines (CSOs).

The ICMA (Institute of Management Accountants) classifies "level C" as understanding six skill levels:

  1. Knowledge: Ability to recall material you previously learned
  2. Comprehension: Ability to interpret and explain material
  3. Application: Ability to demonstrate the use of material in a situation
  4. Analysis: Ability to break down material or recognize relationships between components and identify critical elements
  5. Synthesis: Ability to form hypotheses from different parts of material to create new operations
  6. Evaluation: Ability to criticize, justify and come to conclusions on material
If you can tick the box for each of these skills, you are well on your way to a successful CMA career.

CMA Exam Part 2 Syllabus
CMA Part 2 is all about Strategic Financial Management. In this 4-hour long exam, you will have to complete 100 multiple choice questions and two essay scenarios.

To make it to the essay portion of the exam, you will have to earn at least 50% on the multiple-choice section.

There are six topics covered in CMA Part 2:

  1. Financial Statement Analysis – 20%
  2. Corporate Finance – 20%
  3. Decision Analysis – 25%
  4. Risk Management – 10%
  5. Investment Decision – 10%
  6. Professional Ethics – 15%

Content Specification Outlines for Part 2
To better understand each topic for part 2's CMA exam questions, let's break them down even further.

Financial Statement Analysis

  • Basic Financial Statement Analysis
    • Common size financial statements
    • Common base year financial statements
  • Financial Ratios
    • Liquidity
    • Leverage
    • Activity
    • Profitability
    • Marketing
  • Profitability Analysis
    • Income measure analysis
    • Revenue analysis
    • Cost of sales analysis
    • Expense analysis
    • Variation analysis
  • Special Issues
    • Impact of foreign operations
    • Effects of changing prices and inflation
    • Impact of changes in accounting treatment
    • Accounting and economic concepts of value and income
    • Earnings equality
It's pretty clear that for this topic you will have to understand what financial statements are, and how to perform fundamental analysis on them.

You should be comfortable with the concepts of financial ratios, including liquidity, leverage, activity, profitability, and market; as well as profitability analysis as it impacts things such as income and revenue.

Your financial analysis abilities need to extend further than standard operating procedures. Make sure you can identify their impact on foreign operations and inflation, and comprehend the relationship between accounting and economic concepts of income and value.

Corporate Finance

  • Risk and return
    • Calculation return
    • Types of risk
    • Relationship between risk and return
  • Long-term financial management
    • Term structure of interest rates
    • Types of financial instruments
    • Cost of capital
    • Valuation of financial instruments
  • Raising Capital
    • Financial markets and regulations
    • Market efficiency
    • Financial institutions
    • Initial and secondary public offerings
    • Dividend policy and share repurchases
    • Lease financing
  • Working Capital Management
    • Working capital terminology
    • Cash management
    • Marketable securities management
    • Accounts receivable management
    • Inventory management
    • Types of short term credit
    • Short term credit management
  • Corporate restructuring
    • Mergers and acquisitions
    • Other forms of restructuring
    • International finance
    • Fixed, flexible and floating exchange rates
    • Managing transaction exposure
    • Financing international trade
Corporate Finance is an important topic, as it covers 20% of the exam material in Part 2.

To nail this section of the CMA certification test, you will need to get familiar with risk and return, and long term financial management, such as term structures for interest rates, cost of capital and various types of financial instruments.

Understanding the concepts of how to raise capital will be incredibly helpful. For example, how to raise capital via financial institutions, leasing, dividend and share policies, and more.

Working capital management also covers several content topics specific to cash management, credit management, and general working capital terminology.

This section will also touch base on corporate restructuring, and again, the importance of foreign Finance.

Decision Analysis

  • Cost/volume/profit analysis
    • Breakeven analysis
    • Profit performance and alternative operating levels
    • Analysis of multiple products
  • Marginal analysis
    • Sunk costs, opportunity costs, and other related concepts
    • Marginal costs and marginal revenue
    • Special orders and pricing
    • Make vs. buy
    • Sell or process further
    • Add or drop a segment
    • Capacity considerations
  • Pricing
    • Pricing methodologies
    • Target costing
    • Elasticity of demand
    • Product life-cycle considerations
    • Market structure considerations
Making up the most substantial portion of CMA Part 2, Decision analysis makes up 25% of your total exam grade. This section covers three main topics:

Cost, Volume, Profit Analysis Here you will want to know how to calculate the break-even analysis; the point where total costs and total revenue are equal.

You will also need to know how to judge profit performance and be comfortable analyzing multiple products.

Marginal Analysis Marginal analysis is essentially "make vs. buy" decisions that take into consideration sunk and opportunity costs, special orders and pricing, capacity considerations, and more.

Pricing Pricing methodologies and product life cycle considerations will be covered in this section. Additionally, you should feel confident in your knowledge and understanding of target costing, the elasticity of demand, and market structure considerations.

Risk Management

  • Enterprise Risk
    • Types of risk
    • Risk identification and assessment
    • Risk mitigation strategies
    • Managing risk
This section makes up a meager 10% of your exam and focuses on enterprise risk. This means understanding the different types of risk and how to assess them, as well as knowing how to mitigate and manage the level of risk.

Investment Decisions

  • Capital budgeting process
    • Stages of capital budgeting
    • Incremental cash flows
    • Income tax considerations
    • Evaluating uncertainty
  • Capital investment analysis methods
    • Net present values
    • Internal rate of return
    • Payback
    • Comparison of investment analysis methods
Another relatively small section, investment decisions makes up 10% of your mark and will require your understanding of the capital budgeting process and capital investment analysis methods.

If you understand incremental cash flows, tax considerations, rate of return, and payback, then you should be good.

Professional Ethics

  • Business ethics
    • Moral philosophies and values
    • Ethical Decision making
  • Ethical considerations for management accounting and financial management professionals
    • IMA's Statement of Ethical Professional Practice
    • Fraud triangle
    • Evaluation and resolution of ethical issues
  • Ethical considerations for an organization
    • Organizational factors and ethical culture
    • IMA's Statement on Management Accounting, "Values and Ethics: From Inception to Practice"
    • Ethical leadership
    • Legal compliance
    • Responsibility for ethical conduct
    • Sustainability and social responsibility
Finally, ethics makes up 15% of your mark and closes out the CSOs for Part 2.

Not only will you have to understand basic business ethics, but you should be familiar with ethical considerations for both an organization, and for accounting professionals.

This includes knowing the IMA's Statement of Ethical Professional Practice, and their statement on Management Accounting, "Values and Ethics: From Inception to Practice."

Some other key topics include the fraud triangle, legal compliance, and ethical leadership.
Passing the CMA Exam Part 2
Just like our overview post on Part 1, this article has given you a lot of information to digest. The key is to organize your studies, so you sit for the exam on your chosen CMA exam date with a clear understanding of the core concepts identified in the CSO and are able to identify the subtle differences between them.

Study plans and practice exams will be your best friend. After all, practice makes perfect, and so does organized studying.

Top-notch CMA review courses like London International are great because they provide candidates with the tools and resources they need to study for success.

I know from personal experience that getting started can feel a little overwhelming, so if you aren't sure where to begin, be sure to click the button below and drop your enquiries.

Here's to crushing CMA Part 2 and being one step closer to earning that coveted designation!

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