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Part I: Introduction

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Title: Part I: Introduction


1
Part I Introduction
  • Chapter 1 Overview of Managerial Finance /
    Financial Management

2
1.1 Financial Management An Intro.
  • The business function relating to the decisions
    involving
  • What long-term investments should you take on ?
    What lines of businesses ? What sorts of
    buildings, machineries and equipments?
    (Investment Decisions)
  • Where will you get the long-term financing to pay
    for your investment? Will you bring in other
    owners or will you borrow the money? (Capital
    Structure Decisions)
  • How will you manage your everyday financial
    activities such as collecting from customers and
    paying suppliers? (Working Capital Management
    Decisions)
  • How the profit earned by the business shall be
    allocated to the owners? (Dividend Decisions)

3
  • Financial Management, broadly speaking is the
    study of ways to answer these three questions.
  • The maintenance and creation of economic value or
    wealth.
  • The study of investment decisions by corporations
    and ways the investment is financed
  • Finance uses accounting information together with
    other information to make decisions that affect
    the market value of the firm.
  • Conducting all financial matters of the
    organization in a way that ensures that funds are
    used in a proper and efficient manner

4
1.2 Financial Management Decisions
  • Capital Budgeting/ Investment Decisions (Part IV)
  • Capital Structure Decisions/ Financing Decisions
    (Part V)
  • Working Capital Management Decisions (Part VI)
  • Dividend Decisions (Part V)
  • Dividend Decisions are also sometimes considered
    as a part of Capital Structure Decisions.

5
1. Capital Budgeting/ Investment Decisions
  • The process of planning and managing a firms
    long-term investments.
  • The types of investment opportunities that would
    typically be considered depend in part on the
    nature of the firms business.
  • Evaluating the size, timing, and risk of future
    cash flows is the essence of capital budgeting.
  • The financial manager tries to identify
    investment opportunities that are worth more to
    the firm than they cost to acquire.

6
2. Capital Structure Decisions
  • A firms capital structure is the specific
    mixture of long-term debt and equity the firm
    uses to finance its operations and long-term
    investments.
  • Two concerns of financial manager
  • How much of debt and how much of equity should
    the firm borrow? (the mixture chosen will affect
    both, the value and the risk of the firm)-
    optimum debt-equity ratio
  • What are the least expensive sources of funds for
    the firm?
  • How the firm as a pie is sliced among creditors
    and shareholders?
  • How and where to raise the money ?

7
3. Working Capital Management Decisions
  • Working Capital refers to a firms short-term
    assets, such as inventory, and its short-term
    liabilities, such as money owed to suppliers (a/c
    receivables)
  • Day-to-day activity
  • Ensuring that firm has sufficient resources to
    continue its operations.
  • To avoid costly interruptions.
  • Relevant issues
  • How much cash and inventory should we keep on
    hand?
  • Should we sell in credit ? What should be credit
    policy?
  • How shall we obtain needed short-term financing?

8
4. Dividend Decisions
  • Related to the decisions regarding allocation of
    profit among the shareholders/owners.
  • What should be done with the profits of the firm
    ?
  • Whether dividend should be distributed or not ?
  • How much profit shall be kept in the form of
    retained earnings?
  • How much shall be ploughed back to the business?
  • Does the distribution of dividend increase the
    value of the firm ?

9
Some Fundamental Principles
  • Before we begin to study financial management in
    detail, there are two fundamental concepts that
    must be understood
  • The right goal of the firm/financial mgt/manager
  • The risk/return tradeoff
  • These two concepts underlie every major technique
    that we will study

10
All management decisions should help to
accomplish the goal of the firm!
  • What should be the goal of the firm and hence the
    goal of FM ?

11
1.3 Goal of Financial Management
  • Possible Goals
  • Survive
  • Avoid financial distress
  • Beat the competition
  • Maximize sales of market share
  • Minimize costs
  • Maintain steady earnings growth

Controlling Risk
Profitability
12
Problems with such goals
  • Maximize sales or market share
  • By lowering price or relaxing credit terms ?
  • Minimize cost
  • Doing away with things like R D ?
  • Avoid distress and bankruptcy
  • By never borrowing any money or never taking risk
    ?
  • Survive
  • What about growth ?
  • Beat the competition
  • Placing dependence of your activities on
    competitors actions ?

13
Is it ?
  • Profit Maximization?
  • Probably most commonly cited goal
  • But even this is not precise objective

WHY ?
14
Issues regarding this goal
What about risk from the perspective of
shareholders
  • Do we mean profits this year ( current profit )?
  • If yes, then why not maximize profit by
  • Deferring maintenance
  • Letting inventories run down
  • Canceling all casualty and liability insurance
    policies so that the money spent on premiums
    could go to profit instead.
  • Taking other short-run cost cutting measures
  • Shall we be overly concerned about short-term
    profits results rather than the long-term
    strategic positioning of the company ?
  • Ok fine ! Lets us refer to some sort of long
    run or average profits.
  • Does it give clear definition of what are we
    trying to maximize ?

15
Issues regarding this goal (contd)
  • Do we mean something like accounting net income
    (NI) or earnings per share (EPS) ?
  • If yes, then these accounting numbers may be
    easily manipulated.
  • What do we mean by long run ?
  • This goal doesnt tell us what the appropriate
    trade-off is between current and future profits.

In the long run, were all DEAD !
16
Incorrectness of this goal.
  • This goal is inadequate for at least three
    reasons
  • It ignores the time value of money
  • It ignores risk
  • It can lead to a preoccupation with short-term
    results which, in turn, can lead to sub-optimal
    long-term results

We need goal that encompasses both factors
safety and profit
17
Correct Goal of the Firm/ FM
Shareholders Wealth Maximization
this is the same as a) Maximizing Firm Value b)
Maximizing Stock Price
Eureka !!!!!
18
The Correct Goal of the Firm
  • The correct goal of the firm is to maximize
    shareholder wealth (i.e., shareholders equity)
    or, equivalently, to maximize the firms stock
    price.
  • By this we mean to imply that the managers of the
    firm work for the shareholders
  • For this reason, they have a duty to make
    investments that are expected to increase
    shareholder wealth
  • Further, they have a duty to take all investments
    that are expected to increase shareholder wealth

19
The Goal of U.S. West Inc.
  • From the U.S. West Annual Report to Shareowners
    1988
  • Our mission is to provide quality products and
    services to customers in responsive and
    innovative ways in order to create the highest
    possible value for our investors through
    long-term growth and profitability

20
The goal of the firm should be to maximize the
stock price!
  • This is equivalent to saying the goal is to
    maximize owners wealth.
  • Note that the stock price is affected by
    managements decisions affecting both risk and
    profit.
  • Stock price can be maintained or increased only
    when stockholders perceive that they are
    receiving profits that fully compensate them for
    bearing the risk they perceive.

21
Shareholders Wealth Maximization
  • Good decisions increase the value of the stock,
    and poor decisions decrease the value of the
    stock.
  • Financial manager should act in the shareholders
    best interest by making decisions that increase
    the value of the stock.
  • The goal of FM is thus, to maximize the current
    value per share of the existing stock.
  • There is no ambiguity in the criterion, and there
    is no short-run vs long-run issue.
  • We explicitly mean that our goal is to maximize
    the current stock value (firms present value)

22
Does it seem little strong and one-dimensional ?
  • But, remember, shareholders are residual owners.
  • They get whats left after employees, suppliers
    and creditors are paid their due.
  • If the stockholders are winning in the sense that
    the leftover, residual portion is growing, it
    must be true that everyone else is winning also.
  • How to identify those investments and financing
    arrangements that favorably impact the value of
    the stock ?

Thats precisely what we will be studying in FM
23
Is stock price maximization the same as profit
maximization?
  • No, despite a generally high correlation amongst
    stock price, EPS, and cash flow.
  • Current stock price relies upon current earnings,
    as well as future earnings and cash flow.
  • Some actions may cause an increase in earnings,
    yet cause the stock price to decrease (and vice
    versa).

24
The Goal of Financial Management
  • The primary financial goal is shareholder wealth
    maximization, which translates to maximizing
    stock price.
  • Do firms have any responsibilities to society at
    large?
  • Is stock price maximization good or bad for
    society?
  • Should firms behave ethically?

25
A more General Goal
  • What is the appropriate goal with firm without
    traded stock ?
  • It is difficult to say what the value per share
    is at any given time.
  • More generally it can be said that the goal is to
    maximize the market value of the existing owners
    equity.

26
Goal Objective Advantages Disadvantages
Profit maximization Large amount of profits Easy to calculate profits Easy to determine the link between financial decisions and profits. Emphasizes the short term Ignores risk or uncertainty Ignores the timing of returns Requires immediate resources.
Shareholders Wealth Maximization Highest market value of shares Emphasizes the long term Recognises risk of uncertainty Recognises the timing of returns Consider shareholders return. Offer no clear relationship between financial decisions and share price. Can lead management anxiety and frustration.
27
1.4 The Risk/Return Tradeoff
  • Throughout financial theory, we assume that
    individuals are risk averse
  • This means that individuals prefer less risk to
    more risk
  • However, a risk averse individual will accept
    almost any level of risk as long as they are
    properly compensated
  • We assume that the risk-return tradeoff is a
    linear function (there is no good evidence that
    it isnt)

28
The Risk/Return Tradeoff Graphically
  • Assume that there are two projects A and B
  • Project B is riskier than project A
  • Therefore, we expect that B will, on average over
    time, earn a higher return than A
  • Otherwise, nobody would ever invest in B

Return
B
A
B
A
Risk
29
Risk-Return Tradeoff in Financial Decisions
  • Financial decisions often involve alternative
    courses of action.
  • Should the firm set up a plant which has a
    capacity of 1 Mln tons or 2 Mln tons ?
  • Should the debt-equity ratio of the firm be 21
    or 11 ?
  • Should the firm pursue a generous credit policy
    or niggardly credit policy ?
  • Should the firm carry a large inventory or a
    small inventory ?
  • Each of alternative actions has different
    risk-return implications.

30
Risk-Return Tradeoff (contd.)
  • In general, making financial decisions involves
    answering following questions
  • What is the expected return ?
  • What is the risk exposure ?
  • Given the risk-return characteristics of the
    decision, how would it influence value ?

Capital Budgeting Decisions
RETURN
Capital Structure Decisions
Market Value of the Firm
Dividend Decisions
RISK
Working Capital Decisions
31
1.5 Organization for the finance function
  • The responsibilities for financial management are
    dispersed throughout the organization.
  • The engineer, proposing a new plant, shapes the
    investment policy of the firm.
  • Marketing analyst provides inputs in the process
    for forecasting and planning.
  • Departmental managers, in general, are important
    links in the financial control system of the
    firm.
  • However, many of the specialized jobs of the FM
    are attended by specialist.
  • These tasks can be distributed between two key
    financial functions viz Treasurership and
    Controllership

32
Finance function in a Typical Business
Organization
33
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34
Functions of the Treasurer and Controller
Treasurer Controller
Obtaining Finance Financial Accounting
Banking Relationship Internal Auditing
Cash Management Taxation
Credit Administration Management Accounting
Capital Budgeting
35
Role of The Financial Manager
Financial
Firm's
Financial
manager
operations
markets
36
Other functions of financial officers
  • Involvement in injecting financial discipline in
    corporate management processes.
  • Monitoring the operations of the firm to achieve
    desired financial results.
  • Guide and participate in tasks of planning, funds
    allocation, and control so that the financial
    point of view is sufficiently emphasized in the
    process of corporate management.

37
1.6 Agency Problem and the Control of the
Corporation
  • Because managers work for the shareholders, they
    are considered to be agents for the shareholders.
  • Occasionally, managers may act in their own best
    interest, rather than in the interest of their
    shareholders
  • This is known as an agency problem

38
Agency Problem
  • Shareholders desire wealth maximization (at all
    cost?)
  • Do managers maximize shareholder wealth?
  • Mangers have many constituencies stakeholders
  • Agency Problems represent the conflict of
    interest between management and owners (within
    the agency relationship)

39
Agency relationships
  • An agency relationship exists whenever a
    principal hires an agent to act on their behalf
    and represent his/her interest.
  • Within a corporation, agency relationships exist
    between
  • Shareholders and managers
  • Shareholders and creditors

40
Ownership vs. Management
  • Difference in Information
  • Stock prices and returns
  • Issues of shares and other securities
  • Dividends
  • Financing
  • Different Objectives
  • Managers vs. stockholders
  • Top mgmt vs. operating mgmt
  • Stockholders vs. banks and lenders

41
Shareholders versus Managers
  • Managers are naturally inclined to act in their
    own best interests.
  • But the following factors affect managerial
    behavior
  • Managerial compensation plans
  • Direct intervention by shareholders
  • The threat of firing
  • The threat of takeover

42
Shareholders versus Creditors
  • Shareholders (through managers) could take
    actions to maximize stock price that are
    detrimental to creditors.
  • In the long run, such actions will raise the cost
    of debt and ultimately lower stock price.

43
Managers and Shareholder Interests
  • Tools to Ensure Management Pays Attention to the
    Value of the Firm
  • Mangers actions are subject to the scrutiny of
    the board of directors.
  • Shirkers are likely to find they are ousted by
    more energetic managers.
  • Financial incentives such as stock options

44
Solutions
  • Agency Problem Solutions
  • 1 - Compensation plans tied to financial
    performance in general and oftentimes to share
    value in particular.
  • 2 - Board of Directors- elected by shareholders,
    who, in trun hire and fire management.
  • 3 - Takeovers
  • 4 - Specialist Monitoring
  • 5 - Auditors

45
Conflict between shareholders and Managers
Owners delegate operational control to agents.
Agents, the managers, have their own goals which
may not be consistent with those of shareholders.
Managers are monitored and selected by directors,
who are elected by shareholders
Shareholders attempt to control managers by
  • Using incentives in employment contracts or pay
    with shares, stock options or profit sharing
    Agency cost
  • Agency costs are sum of
  • monitoring costs of the shareholders
  • costs of implementing the control devices
  • Exploiting a competitive labor market
  • Mounting a takeover offer and casting out the
    current managers

46
Agency Costs
  • There are two types of costs associated with the
    agency problem
  • Direct agency costs are the loss in shareholder
    wealth due to managerial misconduct
  • Direct agency cost come in two forms
  • Corporate expenditure that benefits management
    but costs the stockholders. Eg. Purchase of a
    luxurious and unneeded corporate jet.
  • An expense that arises from the need to monitor
    management actions. Eg. Paying external auditors.
  • Indirect agency costs are the costs of avoiding
    the agency problem

47
Whose Company Is It?
Survey of 378 managers from 5 countries
48
Dividends vs. Jobs
Survey of 399 managers from 5 countries. Which
is more important...jobs or paying dividends?
49
Control of Corporation
elections
Board of Directors
selections
Management
Shareholders
operations
50
1.7 Relationship of Finance to Economics
  • Two important linkages
  • Macro-economic environment defines the settings
    within which a firm operates
  • Micro-economic theory provides the conceptual
    underpinning for the tolls of financial decision
    making
  • Understanding of the macro-economic developments
    sensitizes the financial manager to the
    opportunities and threats in the environment.
  • Firm grounding in micro-economic principles
    sharpens his analysis of decision alternatives.
  • In fact, finance is applied micro-economics.

51
Relationship of Finance to Accounting
  • In popular perception finance and accounting are
    often considered indistinguishable or at least
    substantially overlapping.
  • Differences and Relationship between the two
  • Score Keeping Vs Value Maximizing
  • Accrual Method Vs Cash Flow Method
  • Certainty Vs Uncertainty
  • The accountants role is to provide
    consistently developed and easily interpreted
    data about the firms past, present and future
    operations. The financial manager uses these data
    either in raw form or after certain adjustments
    and analyzes, as an important input to the
    decision-making process

52
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53
Something You Should Know Before You Enter Into
the subject of FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
54
The Fundamental Principal of Finance
  • A business proposal regardless of whether it
    is a new investment or acquisition of another
    company or a restructuring initiative- raises the
    value of the firm only if the present value of
    the future stream of net cash benefits expected
    from the proposal is greater than the initial
    cash outlay required to implement the proposal
  • Investors
  • Shareholders
  • Lenders

The Business Proposal
Investors provide the initial cash required to
finance the business proposal
The proposal generates cash returns to investors
55
Functional Areas Needed to Accomplish the
Strategic Plan
Examples
Team Support
Marketing and Sales
Communication
Recruiting
People
What results must we accomplish in these areas?
GOALS
By what means () are we going to
accomplish these results OBJECTIVES/STRATEGY
56
Important focal points in the study of finance
  • Accounting and Finance often focus on different
    things
  • Finance is more focused on market values rather
    than book values.
  • Finance is more focused on cash flows rather than
    accounting income.

57
Why is market value more important than book
value?
  • Book values are often based on dated values
    (historical costs)
  • For current assets, MV and BV might be somewhat
    similar.
  • For fixed assets, theyre different by far.
  • The MV of financial assets depends on things like
    its riskiness and cash flows, neither of which
    have anything to do with accounting.
  • They consist of the original cost of the asset
    from some past time, minus accumulated
    depreciation (which may not represent the actual
    decline in the assets value).
  • Maximization of market value of the stockholders
    shares is the goal of the firm.
  • Financial manager must be more interested on MV
    than BV.

58
Why is cash flow more important than accounting
income?
  • Cash flow to stockholders (in the form of
    dividends) is the only basis for valuation of the
    common stock shares. Since the goal is to
    maximize stock price, cash flow is more directly
    related than accounting income.
  • Accounting methods recognize income at times
    other than when cash is actually received or
    spent. (Accrual and Matching Principle)

59
One more reason that cash flow is important
  • When cash is actually received is important,
    because it determines when cash can be invested
    to earn a return.
  • Also When cash must be paid determines when
    we need to start paying interest on money
    borrowed.

60
Examples of when accounting income is different
from cash flow
  • Credit sales are recognized as accounting income,
    yet cash has not been received.
  • Depreciation expense is a legitimate accounting
    expense when calculating income, yet depreciation
    expense is not a cash outlay.
  • A loan brings cash into a business, but is not
    income.

61
More examples
  • When new capital equipment is purchased, the
    entire cost is a cash outflow, but only the
    depreciation expense (a portion of the total
    cost) is an expense when computing accounting
    income.
  • When dividends are paid, cash is paid out, though
    dividends are not included in the calculation of
    accounting income.

62
Definitions Operating income vs. operating cash
flow
  • Operating income earnings before interest and
    taxes (EBIT).
  • This is the total income that the company earned
    by operating during the period. It is income
    available to pay interest to creditors, taxes to
    the government, and dividends to stockholders.

63
Operating cash flow
  • Operating cash flow
    EBIT Depreciation - Taxes.
  • This definition recognizes that depreciation
    expense is subtracted in computing EBIT, though
    it is not a cash outlay.
  • It also recognizes that taxes paid is a cash
    outlay.

64
Fund Flows via Market
Markets
Surplus Units
Deficit Units
Intermediaries
65
Fund Flows via Intermediary
Markets
Surplus Units
Deficit Units
Intermediaries
66
Fund Flows via Intermediary and Market
Markets
Surplus Units
Deficit Units
Intermediaries
67
Funds Flow via Markets and Intermediaries
Markets
Surplus Units
Deficit Units
Intermediaries
68
Funds Flow Disintermediation
Markets
Markets
Surplus Units
Deficit Units
Surplus Units
Deficit Units
Intermediaries
Intermediaries
69
The end
  • Thank you
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