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FINANCE

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Title: Chapter 1: What is Finance? Author: Zeng Yong & Guo Wenxin Last modified by: Liqiang Created Date: 5/22/1998 1:40:49 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FINANCE


1
FINANCE
  • Zvi Bodie
  • Robert C. Merton

2
  • About the instructors
  • About the TA
  • About the course
  • About the requirements
  • 20 assignment class performance
  • 15 mid-term test
  • 65 final test
  • About the book and authors

3
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4
  • ????

5
  • ?????

6
Chapter 1 What is Finance?
  • Objective
  • To Define Finance
  • The Value of Finance
  • Introduction to
  • the Players

7
Chapter 1 Contents
  • Defining Finance
  • Why Study Finance
  • Household Finance
  • Financial Decisions-Firms
  • Forms of Business Organization
  • Separation of Ownership and Management
  • The Goal of management
  • Market Discipline-Takeovers
  • Role of the Financial Specialists in a Corporation

8
Defining Finance
  • What do you know about Finance?

9
Defining Finance
Finance, as a scientific discipline, is the
study of how to allocate scarce resources over
time under conditions of uncertainty.
10
Analytical Pillars to Finance
  • Optimization over time
  • Asset valuation
  • Risk management

11
Finance Theory
  • consists of
  • a set of concepts that help to organize ones
    thinking about how to allocate resources over
    time,
  • a set of quantitative models to help one evaluate
    alternatives, make decisions, and implement them.

12
Financial System
  • The financial system is defined as the set of
    markets and other institutions used for financial
    contracting and the exchange of assets and risks.
  • The ultimate function of the system is to satisfy
    peoples consumption preferences.

13
Why Study Finance?
14
Why Study Finance?
15
Why Study Finance?
16
Why Study Finance?
  • To manage your personal resources
  • To deal with the world of business
  • To pursue interesting and rewarding career
    opportunities
  • To make informed public choices as a citizen
  • To expand your mind

17
Harry M. Markowitz (1927)
  • Awarded to the 1990 Nobel Prize
  • Main Contribution
  • The father of modern portfolio theory

18
William F. Sharpe (1934)
  • Awarded to the 1990 Nobel Prize
  • Main Contribution
  • Developing the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
    theory

19
Merton H. Miller (19232000)
  • Awarded to the 1990 Nobel Prize
  • Main Contribution
  • The MM (Modigliani-Miller) Theorem

20
Robert C. Merton (1944)
  • Awarded to the 1997 Nobel Prize
  • Main Contribution
  • The pricing of options and other derivatives

21
Myron S. Scholes (1941)
  • Awarded to the 1997 Nobel Prize
  • Main Contribution
  • The pricing of options and other derivatives

22
Financial Decisions of Households
  • Consumption and saving decisions
  • Investment decisions
  • Financing decisions
  • Risk-management decisions

23
Important Terms
  • Assets
  • Personal investing Asset allocation
  • Liability, Debt
  • Net Worth Assets Liabilities
  • Consumption preferences, exogenous and endogenous
    elements

24
Financial Decisions of Firms
  • Strategic planning Capital budget decisions
  • What businesses to be in
  • Identifying ideas for new investment projects
  • Evaluating the projects, and deciding which ones
    to undertake
  • Implementing them, a plan for acquiring assets
    and for training the personnel

25
Financial Decisions of Firms
  • Financing (Capital structure) decision
  • A feasible financing plan
  • The decisions about how much debt and equity to
    have
  • Wide range of financial instruments and claims
  • A corporations capital structure determines who
    gets what shares of its cash flows, and partially
    determines who gets to control the company.
  • Working capital management decision
  • The day-to-day prosaic financial affairs of the
    business.

26
Financial Decisions of Firms
  • Dividend decision
  • How much cash to distribute to shareholders
  • Risk-management Decision
  • How and on what terms should the firm seek to
    reduce the financial uncertainties it faces?

27
Forms of Business Organization
  • A sole proprietorship(?????)
  • unlimited liability
  • A partnership (???)
  • unlimited liability
  • general partner limited partner
  • A corporation(?????)
  • a legal entity distinct from its owners
  • ownership, board of directors and limited
    liability
  • public corporations private corporations

28
Quick Check
  • Is a corporation owned by a single person a sole
    proprietorship? Why?
  • In a corporation the liability of the single
    shareholder would be limited to the assets of the
    corporation.

29
Separation of Ownership and Management
  • The owners of a firm delegate the responsibility
    of running the business to professional managers
    who may not own any shares.

30
Reasons for Separation of Ownership and Management
  • The owner need not have both the talents of a
    manager and the financial resources.
  • The need to pool resources to achieve an
    efficient scale of production.
  • The need of owners to diversify their risk in an
    uncertain economic environment.
  • Allowing for savings in the costs of information
    gathering.
  • The learning curve or going concern effect
    favors the separated structure.

31
Separation of Ownership and Management
  • The corporate form is especially well suited to
    the separation of owners and managers because it
    allows relatively frequent changes in owners by
    share transfer without affecting the operations
    of the firm.

32
Conflicts of Interest
  • The separated structure creates the potential for
    a conflict of interest between the owners and the
    managers.
  • An agency problem exists where the principal has
    to entrust their interests to an agent who acts
    on their behalf.
  • Contractual arrangements, incentive schemes, and
    monitoring are used to control principal?agency
    conflicts.
  • The social cost for resolving the conflict.

33
The Goal of Management
  • The difficulties of the goal of corporate
    management to serve the best interests of the
    shareholders.
  • To be feasible and effective, the right rule for
    the goal of management should be independent of
    who the owners are.

34
Shareholder-Wealth-Maximization Rule
  • An illustration the decision between a risky
    investment and a safe one
  • The role of well-functioning capital markets
  • The rule depends only upon
  • the firms production technology
  • market interest rates
  • market risk premiums
  • security prices
  • The rule does not depend upon the risk aversion
    or wealth of the owners.

35
Ambiguities of Profit-Maximization Rule
  • Multi-periodic profits
  • Uncertain future revenues or expenses
  • An illustration
  • Each of project A, B, and C require an initial
    outlay of 1 million.
  • Project A will return 1.05 million one year from
    now and then over.
  • Project B will last for two years, return nothing
    in the first year, and then 1.1 million two
    years from now.
  • Project C will either pay 1.2 million or 0.9
    million one year from now and then over.

36
A Well-Functioning Stock Market
  • Implementation of the management goal and
    market-price information
  • The existence of an efficient stock market allows
    the manager to substitute one set of external
    information which is relatively easy to obtain?
    namely stock prices?for another set which is
    virtually impossible to obtain?information about
    the shareholders wealth, preferences, and other
    investment opportunities.

37
Market Discipline Takeovers
  • The value of voting rights as a means of
    enforcement
  • The mechanism of takeover(??) for aligning the
    incentives of managers with those of shareholders
  • The threat of a takeover and the subsequent
    replacement of management provides a strong
    incentive for current managers (acting in their
    self-interest) to act in the interests of the
    firms current shareholders by maximizing market
    value.

38
The Roles of Corporate Financial Specialists
  • Financial executive?a person with authority in
    the following functions

39
Role of the Financial Manager
(1)
Financial
Firm's
Financial
manager
operations
markets
(1) Cash raised from investors
40
Role of the Financial Manager
(1)
(2)
Financial
Firm's
Financial
manager
operations
markets
(1) Cash raised from investors
(2) Cash invested in firm
41
Role of the Financial Manager
(1)
(2)
Financial
Firm's
Financial
manager
operations
markets
(3)
(1) Cash raised from investors
(2) Cash invested in firm
(3) Cash generated by operations
42
Role of the Financial Manager
(1)
(2)
Financial
Firm's
Financial
(4a)
manager
operations
markets
(3)
(1) Cash raised from investors
(2) Cash invested in firm
(3) Cash generated by operations
(4a) Cash reinvested
43
Role of the Financial Manager
(1)
(2)
Financial
Firm's
Financial
(4a)
manager
operations
markets
(4b)
(3)
(5)
Tax paid to Government
(5) Tax leakage
(1) Cash raised from investors
(2) Cash invested in firm
(3) Cash generated by operations
(4a) Cash reinvested
(4b) Cash returned to investors
44
Financial Functions in a Corporation
  • Planning
  • Provision of Capital
  • Administration of Funds
  • Accounting and Control
  • Protection of Assets
  • Tax Administration
  • Investor Relations
  • Evaluation and Consulting
  • Management Information Systems

45
Assignments
  • 1, 3, 4, 6, 7
  • Team Work 8
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