Title: TOPIC ONE Cpts 1
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2TOPIC ONECpts 1 2
3Goals of firms
- Range of goals that could be pursued by firms
includes - maximal wealth for owners
- maximal profits
- adequate profits and/or limited working hours
- high revenue growth and/or large market share
- high reputation for product quality and service
- good employee relations, minimising environmental
damage, good corporate citizenship
4Goals of firms (cont.)
- Some of these goals can be interdependent (e.g.
good employee relations and owners wealth
maximisation) - Not all of these goals can be achieved
simultaneously (e.g. limited working hours for
owner-operator and owners wealth maximisation
5Goals of firms (cont.)
- The size of the business will have an impact on
the goals of the owners - Profit maximisation implies a business is managed
to maximise the difference between revenues and
expenses in any period
6Goals of firms (cont.)
- Wealth maximisation implies that the business is
managed so thatthe present and future cash flows
discounted at an appropriate rate will give a
present value (PV) which is maximised
7Goals of firms (cont.)
- A goal of maximising wealth leads to a long-term
view that considers future cash flows, the time
value of money and risk - Thus, maximising wealth is superior to a goal of
profit maximisation
8Goals of firms (cont.)
- The time value of money is the concept that a
dollar is worth more the sooner it is received. - Discounting is the process of calculating the
present value (PV) of a future amount. The
discount factor incorporates the possible or
required earning rate for the funds.
9Goals of firms (cont.)
- The value of a firm at a given time should be the
present value of its future expected cash flows
10Goals of firms (cont.)
- The value of a corporation is the market
capitalisation of the company - Market capitalisation is the total value of a
corporation as measured by the price of each
issued share multiplied by the number of issued
shares.
11Goals of firms (cont.)
- The value of a firm that is not a corporation is
its market value - The market value of a firm is the price that
willing buyers are prepared to pay and willing
sellers are prepared to accept
12Goals of firms (cont.)
- Maximising owners wealth means having the
highest possible valuefor the firm
13Roles of financial managers
- accounting and reporting functions
- cash management, raising and managing funds
- taxation management compliance, forecasting and
planning - risk management of revenues and expenses
14Roles of financial managers (cont.)
- analysing proposed investments, capital
restructures, etc. - forecasting the impact of financial decisions
- internal and external audit management
- investor relations
15Roles of financial managers (cont.)
- Financial derivatives are contracts that are
derived from the value of some underlying assets
and are used to manage risk - They can be used by financial managers to manage
risk
16Financial governance and financial decisions
- Financial governance comprisesall the financial
and management accounting systems and other
financial processes which are put in place to
achieve the objectives of the firm - is critical to the work of the financial manager
17Roles of financial managers (cont.)
- Major financial management decisions
- which new investments?
- how to fund investments
- how to manage short-term funding
- how to manage long-term funding
- which dividend policy?
- how to manage risk
18The principalagent problem
- The principalagent problem is the scope for
conflict or division between principals (owners)
and agents (managers) over the goals of the firm
which are being pursued by its policy and
management decisions
19The principalagent problem (cont.)
- Agency costs are the losses borne by the owners
of the firm that canbe attributed to the agent
having different objectives from the owners (or
principals). - HIH example of CEO making large donations of
corporate funds for his personal gain
20The principal-agent problem (cont.)
- Agency costs come from managers having different
objectives from those of the owners of the
company - They are only an issue when thereis a separation
of ownership and management
21Ethics in business
- Ethics are moral principles or rules of conduct
which indicate the acceptability of behaviour
within a community - Unethical actions may be legal (e.g. shifting
production to a country that has lower legal
standards for worker and/or environmental
protection)
22Ethics in business (cont.)
- Ethical behaviour can be consistent with wealth
maximisation because it maintains the companys
reputation - Whistle-blowing means informing (usually by
employees of the perpetrators) the relevant
authorities of malpractice or dangers to the
public or the environment
23Ethics in business (cont.)
- Corporate social responsibility (CSR) means that
the business firm has wider responsibilities in
relation to objectives and people apart from the
owners or shareholders - Stakeholders include employees, customers,
suppliers, regulators and the general public
24Forms of business organisation
- 4 main forms of business organisation
- sole trader or sole proprietor
- partnership
- company
- trust
25Sole proprietorship
- A sole proprietorship is a business owned by an
individual, who owns assets used in the business,
incurs liabilities and reaps the annual profits
or losses - The corner shop or local newsagent, for example
26Partnership
- A partnership is an associationof two or more
people carrying ona business in common with a
viewto profit - The local (or international) accounting or legal
practice, for example
27Company
- A company is an entity, formed under the
Corporations Act 2001, which is legally separate
from its owners - Corporate governance means the management of
corporations
28Company (cont.)
- Private companies can be relatively small family
businesses - Public companies tend to be larger and will have
a greater number of shareholders - Shareholders (the owners of companies) have
limited liability
29Trust
- A trust is a legal structure where property is
nominally owned by one party, the trustee, on
behalf of others who are the beneficiaries - Are a popular form of business structure when
they can get benefits from the current taxation
legislation
30- The best business structure depends on the
personal circumstances of the owners
31Overview of Australian tax
- Income tax is levied in Australia on individuals
and companies taxable income - Taxable income is assessable income less
legitimate deductions - Income is normally received regularly (or
frequently)
32Overview of Australian tax (cont.)
- For businesses, the general rule for allowable
deductions are those expenditures incurred to
earn assessable income. - Marginal rates of tax are important for analysing
alternative activities for the impact on marginal
income.
33Overview of Australian tax (cont.)
- Capital gains tax (CGT) is paidon gains made on
the disposalof assets purchased after19
September 1985. - Goods and services tax (GST) isa type of
consumption tax that is paid irrespective of the
individuals level of income.
34Importance of dividend imputation
- Dividend imputation is the system where dividends
carry an additional benefit in the form of an
attached tax credit for the relevant amount of
tax paid by the company on its profits. - The system avoids the double taxation of company
profits.
35- A fully franked dividend carries a tax credit
equal to the full 30 company tax paid on the
underlying profit. - A partly franked dividend carries a tax credit
less than the full 30 company tax paid on the
underlying profit. - An unfranked dividend carries no tax credit.
36- Shareholders only pay tax on dividends when their
marginal tax rate is higher than the level of
franking credits on the dividends they receive. - Are there implications for financial decision
making?
37- When shareholders can fully utilise imputation
credits - tax paid by the company is irrelevant when the
financial manager is making the decision - When shareholders cannot utilise imputation
credits - tax paid by the company is relevant to corporate
financial decision making
38Challenges facing modern firms
- Important aspects of change
- external environment (e.g. deregulation)
- advancing technology (e.g. electronic commerce)
- social expectations (e.g. employee working
conditions)
39People and decision making
- Rational behaviour implies decisions are made
after an amount of reasoning so that ultimate
decisions are not foolish or absurd, and are
based on the desire to satisfy objectives and
maximise, or at least optimise, outcomes - Assumed when people make decisions!
40INTRODUCING CORPORATE FINANCEChapter 2 Business
and the Financial Markets
- By Diana Beal and
- Michelle Goyen
41Roles of financial markets
- The financial markets in Australia fulfil many
roles including - matching supply and demand for funds
- facilitating business and trade
- facilitating the saving of individualsfor future
consumption - provision of financial services
42Financing business operations
- Sources of finance are direct or indirect
- Direct finance the supplier of funds and the
fund user transact directly - Intermediated finance the intermediary collect
funds from suppliers and deals with the fund users
43- Transaction costs are the costs,in terms of both
time and explicit cash costs, of effecting a
transaction or deal
44Types of financial institutions
- Main types of Australian financial institutions
- Authorised deposit-taking institutions
- Registered financial corporations
45- Authorised deposit-taking institutions (ADIs)
- Take deposits and make loans to borrowers
- Banks
- Building societies
- Credit unions
46- Registered financial corporations (RFCs)
- Use their capital or borrow so they can make
loans - money market corporations, pastoral finance
companies, finance companies, general financiers
and intra-group financiers
47Classifying the markets
- There are three main divisions in financial
markets - primary or secondary
- public or private
- money or capital markets
48- Securities documents which provide evidence of
a loan or the purchase of shares, a bond or a
commercial bill - Price discovery the process of finding and
settling on a price which is acceptable to both
parties
49- primary market where securities are offered for
the first time - money goes to the issuer
- secondary markets trading securities which have
been issued - secondary market trades do not increase the stock
of securities - money goes to previous security holder
50- Two ways to issue securities
- Private placements are made by negotiation
directly with purchasers - Public issues are made to the public and require
the use of a prospectus
51- prospectus a document which provides details of
a new issue of securities to the public - public issues are
- usually larger than private ones
- more expensive due to the application and issuing
processes - sponsoring broker and/or underwriter fees
52- merchant bank a financial institution which is
not registered nor regulated under the Banking
Act 1959 but which carries out many of the
functions of a bank - sometimes handles private issues
53- Money markets deal in short-term debt
- bills, promissory notes and certificates of
deposit - Capital markets deal in long-term instruments
- debentures, secured or unsecured notes, leases,
loans, shares and convertible notes
54Debt and equity
- Debt is a contractual arrangement to borrow money
that will be repaid in the future - Equity represents an ownership interest, so there
is no expectation that it will be repaid in the
future - Equity holders get their money back by selling
their ownership interest
55- maturity (or term to maturity) is the contracted
time that may elapse before the borrowed funds
are to be repaid - financial structure the mix of debt and equity
which fund the assets owned by the business
56- Risk the chance that the actual outcome from an
investment will be different from the expected
outcome - suppliers demand higher returns for riskier
securities (discussed in Chapter 4)
57- Financial risk is the risk involved in using debt
as a source of finance - Financial distress a firms financial
obligations cannot be met or can only be met with
major difficulty - creditors rank higher than owners if a firm is
liquidated
58- debtholders receive interest payments from the
borrower - interest payments provide a tax deduction for the
borrower - equity holders receive dividends
- dividends are not tax deductible,but give the
shareholder imputation credits if they are
franked
59Debt instruments
- Trade credit allows a purchase to be made without
the immediate payment of cash - usually have a 7- or 30-day term
- An overdraft is a permitted over-drawing of funds
beyond the credit balance in the account
60- Inventory finance (or floor-plan finance) is
provided to car and whitegoods dealers to buy
stock to place on showroom floors and is secured
by the stock itself - for retailers with high value inventories
61- Promissory notes (P-notes) are promises by the
borrowers to - repay the face value of the instrument at a
stated future date - Commercial bills are promises by the borrowers to
- repay at a stated future date the face value of
the instrument - the promise is normally guaranteed by a third
party such as a bank
62- Face value is the amount that will be repaid upon
maturity of the debt security - Face value is specified at the time the debt
security is issued - Discount securities are issued at a price less
than the face value
63- Debentures are fixed-term debt securities issued
under a prospectus - secured by assets
- Unsecured notes are fixed-term debt securities
issued under a prospectus - are not secured by assets
- Both are issued by companies
64- Corporate bonds debt instruments where the
issuer receives the face value of the bonds at
the outset - face value is repaid when thebonds mature
- pay a regular coupon
- Coupon is the stated rate of interest paid on a
bond
65- Corporate bonds usually receivea credit rating
that indicates the level of credit risk - Junk bonds have a rating of BBB or lower
66Equity instruments
- Three main types of equity instruments
- ordinary shares (fully paid)
- contributing shares (partly paid ordinary shares)
- preference shares
67- An ordinary share is evidence of part-ownership
of a company - Contributing shares or partly-paid shares are
ordinary shares where the full cost has not yet
been paid to the issuing company
68- Preference shares are hybrid equity instruments
with some characteristics of equity and some of
debt - normally have a fixed dividend which has
preference over the payment of ordinary dividends
69Regulators and regulation
- Australian Government regulates financial markets
via the - Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA)
- Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA)
- Australian Securities and Investments Commission
(ASIC)
70- Reserve Bank
- objective of ensuring the stability of the
financial system - controls monetary policy by setting the cash rate
of interest - conducts open market operations in Commonwealth
Government Securities
71- Re-purchase agreements or repos are securities
that are bought or sold with an agreement to
reverse the original transaction at a later date - Used by the RBA to manage the economy
72- Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA)
- prudential regulator of ADIs
- prudential means that management of the ADI
have the responsibility to behave sensibly - uses the Bank of International Settlements (BIS)
guidelines for capital adequacy
73- Australian Securities and Investments Commission
(ASIC) - administers the Corporations Act 2001
- management and maintenance of financial market
integrity - consumer protection
- maintenance of confidence by stakeholders in the
financial system
74- Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)
- Regulates listed companies with respect to the
handling and release of company information - non-compliance by companies can mean share
trading is suspended
75- Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
(ACCC) also watches markets for competition and
consumer protection issues
76People dimensions
- Framing is the context or environment from which
information or data are extracted - Dominance implies that the most outstanding
attribute or benefit will consistently maintain
its premier position, no matter how it is
presented
77- Rational investors chose the dominant alternative
no matterhow the choice is framed
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