03 · Core Toolkit
Ten forecasting models everyone should know
These ten show up across corporate finance, investment research, accounting, and small-business planning. Each entry includes a plain definition, when to use it, and a worked mini-example.
1. Straight-line forecasting simplest
Assumes a metric grows at the same fixed dollar or percentage amount every period, based on its historical average growth rate.
Forecast = Last actual value × (1 + average historical growth rate)
Example: A bookstore's revenue grew from $200,000 to $220,000 to $242,000 over three years — a steady 10% annual increase. A straight-line forecast projects $266,200 next year (242,000 × 1.10).
2. Moving average time-series
Smooths out short-term noise by averaging a fixed number of recent periods, so random spikes don't distort the trend.
3-month MA = (Month1 + Month2 + Month3) ÷ 3
Example: An ice-cream shop's sales are $9,000, $14,000 and $11,000 over three summer months. The moving average of $11,333 gives a steadier baseline for planning staff schedules than any single noisy month.
3. Exponential smoothing time-series
Similar to a moving average, but gives more weight to the most recent data points, so the forecast reacts faster to new trends.
Forecast(t+1) = α × Actual(t) + (1−α) × Forecast(t)
Example: A retailer weighting last month at 80% (α = 0.8) will adjust its forecast much faster after a sudden demand shock than a plain moving average would.
4. Linear regression causal
Finds a mathematical relationship between one or more independent variables (marketing spend, interest rates, headcount) and a dependent variable (revenue, defaults, output), then extends that relationship forward.
Y = a + bX (Revenue = base + coefficient × Ad Spend)
Example: An analyst finds that for every $1,000 spent on digital ads, a company historically gains $6,500 in revenue. Planned ad spend of $50,000 next quarter implies roughly $325,000 in incremental revenue.
5. Percent-of-sales method accounting
Assumes most balance-sheet and income-statement line items move in proportion to sales — a fast, widely used way to build a full forecasted financial statement.
Forecasted line item = (Historical line item ÷ Historical sales) × Forecasted sales
Example: If cost of goods sold has consistently been 60% of revenue, and next year's revenue is forecast at $1M, COGS is projected at $600,000.
6. Three-statement financial model core model
Links the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement into one dynamic model, so a change in one assumption (say, a slower collection of receivables) automatically flows through to cash balances and financing needs.
Example: An accountant building a bank-loan application links projected revenue growth to inventory needs, which flows into working-capital changes, which flows into the cash-flow statement — showing the lender exactly when and why the business will need the loan.
7. Discounted cash flow (DCF) forecasting valuation
Projects a company's future free cash flows and discounts them back to today's value using a required rate of return, producing an estimate of intrinsic value.
Present Value = Σ [ CFₜ ÷ (1 + r)ᵗ ]
Example: An investor forecasts a company's free cash flow will grow from $10M to roughly $16M over five years, then discounts those cash flows at a 9% required return to estimate what the whole business is worth today.
8. Scenario & sensitivity analysis risk
Builds multiple versions of a forecast — best case, base case, worst case — and tests how sensitive the outcome is to changes in one key assumption at a time.
Example: A restaurant chain models revenue under three foot-traffic scenarios (−15%, flat, +10%) to see how many locations remain profitable if a recession cuts customer visits.
9. Monte Carlo simulation probabilistic
Runs a forecast thousands of times with randomly varied inputs (within realistic ranges) to produce a probability distribution of outcomes, rather than a single number.
Example: A portfolio manager runs 10,000 simulated market paths to estimate the probability that a retirement portfolio lasts 30 years under varying return and inflation assumptions.
10. Delphi method qualitative
A structured, anonymous survey process where a panel of experts gives estimates over several rounds, sees an anonymized summary of the group's views, and revises their own estimate — repeating until opinions converge.
Example: A biotech startup with no sales history surveys ten industry experts anonymously on expected first-year adoption of a new device, refining the estimate over three rounds until the range narrows meaningfully.