ch01_1
TRANSCRIPT
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An Introduction to the Foundations of Financial Management
– The Ties that Bind
Chapter 1
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Learning Objectives
1. Identify the goal of the firm.
2. Compare the various legal forms of business organization and explain why the corporate form of business is the most logical choice for a firm that is large or growing.
3. Describe the corporate tax features that affect business decisions.
4. Explain the 10 principles that form the foundations of financial management.
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Slide Contents
1. The Goal of the Firm2. Ten Principles of Finance3. Legal Forms of Business
Organization4. Role of Financial Manager in a
Corporation5. Income Taxation
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1. The Goal of the Firm
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The Goal of the Firm
The goal of the firm is to maximize shareholder wealth.
Shareholder wealth is measured by share prices. Thus shareholder wealth maximization would imply maximizing the price of common stock.
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Part of Coca-Cola’s Vision
“Maximizing return to shareowners while being mindful of our overall responsibilities.”— http://www.thecoca-colacompany.com/ourcompany/mission_vision_values.html(retrieved March 13, 2007)
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Benefits of Maximizing Shareholder Wealth
Good corporate decisions are those that create wealth for the shareholder.
Society benefits as scarce resources are directed to the most profitable use by businesses competing to create wealth.
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Keown, Martin, Petty - Chapter 1 8
Share Price Changes (during last two years as of June 29, 2007)
Google: Share price increased by nearly $200 or around 67% (from around $300 to $500) … wealth created.
Yahoo: Share price decreased by nearly $8 or around 23% (from around $35 to $27) … wealth destroyed.
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Why is Profit Maximization not the appropriate goal?
Profit maximization goal is unclear about the time frame over which profits are to be measured.
It is easy to manipulate the profits through various accounting policies.
Profit maximization goal ignores risk and timing of cash flows.
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• Ten Principles: The Foundations of Financial Management
“…although it is not necessary to understand finance in order to understand these principles, it is necessary to understand these principles in order to understand finance.”
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Principle 1: The Risk-Return Trade-off Would you invest your savings in
the stock market if it offered the same expected return as your bank?
We won’t take on additional risk unless we expect to be compensated with additional return.
Higher the risk of an investment, higher will be its expected return.
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The Risk-Return Trade-off
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Principle 2: The Time Value of Money
A dollar received today is worth more than a dollar to be received in the future.
Because we can earn interest on money received today, it is better to receive money earlier rather than later.
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Principle 3: Cash—Not Profits—Is King In measuring wealth or value, we use
cash Flow, not accounting profit, as our measurement tool.
Cash flows are actually received by the firm and can be reinvested. On the other hand, profits are recorded when they are earned rather than when money is actually received.
It is possible for a firm to show profits on the books but have no cash!
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Principle 4: Incremental Cash Flows
The incremental cash flow is the difference between the projected cash flows if the project is selected, versus what they will be, if the project is not selected.
This difference reflects the true impact of a decision.
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Principle 5: The Curse of Competitive Markets
It is hard to find exceptionally profitable projects.
If an industry is generating large profits, new entrants are usually attracted. The additional competition and added capacity can result in profits being driven down to the required rate of return.
Product Differentiation (through Service, Quality) and cost advantages (through economies of Scale) can insulate products from competition.
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Principle 6: Efficient Capital Markets
The values of securities at any instant in time fully reflect all publicly available information.
Prices reflect value and are right.
Price changes reflect changes in expected cash flows (and not cosmetic changes such as accounting policy changes). Good decisions drive up the stock prices and vice versa.
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Principle 7: The Agency Problem
The separation of management and the ownership of the firm creates an agency problem. Managers may make decisions that are not in
line with the goal of maximization of shareholder wealth.
Agency conflict reduced through monitoring (ex. Annual reports), compensation schemes (ex. stock options), and market mechanisms (ex. Takeovers).
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Principle 8: Taxes Bias Business Decisions
The cash flows we consider for decision making are the after-tax incremental cash flows to the firm as a whole.
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Principle 9: All Risk is Not Equal
Some risk can be diversified away, and some cannot.
The process of diversification can reduce risk, and as a result, measuring a project’s or an asset’s risk is very difficult. A project’s risk changes depending on whether you measure it standing alone or together with other projects the company may take on.
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All Risk is Not Equal
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Principle 10: Ethical Behavior Is Doing the Right Thing, and Ethical Dilemmas Are Everywhere in Finance
Ethical dilemma — Each person has his or her own set of values, which forms the basis for personal judgments about what is the right thing.
Ethics are relevant in business and unethical decisions can destroy shareholder wealth (ex. Enron Scandal).
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• Legal Forms of Business Organization
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• Legal Forms of Business Organization
Sole Proprietorship Partnership (General & Limited) Corporation Hybrid (S-Type & LLC)
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Sole Proprietorship
Business owned by an individual
Owner maintains title to assets and profits
Unlimited liability
Termination occurs on owner’s death or by owner’s choice
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Partnerships Partnership: Two or more persons come
together as co-owners.
Two types of partnership: General or Limited
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Partnership - General
All partners are fully responsible for liabilities incurred by the partnership.
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Partnerships - Limited
One or more partners can have limited liability
There must be at least one general partner with unlimited liability.
Limited partners cannot participate in the management of the business and their names cannot appear in the name of the firm.
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Comparison of Organizational Forms
Sole Proprietorship and General Partnership Unlimited liabilities Not as easy to raise capital
Limited Partnership Limited liability for partners
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Corporation Legally functions separate and apart from
its owners Corporation can sue, be sued,
purchase, sell, and own property Owners (shareholders) dictate direction
and policies of the corporation. Shareholder’s liability is restricted to the
amount of investment in company. Life of corporation does not depend on
the status of its owners. Ownership can be easily transferred.
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The Trade-offs: Corporate Form
Benefits: Limited liability Easy to transfer ownership Unlimited life (unless the firm goes through corporate
restructuring such as mergers and bankruptcies)
Drawbacks: No secrecy of information Maybe delays in decision making Greater regulation Double taxation
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Double Taxation example
Income = $1,000Federal Tax @25% = $250After tax Income = $750
What will be the total tax if the company chooses to distribute the after-tax profits to shareholders as dividends?
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Double taxation
If corporation distributes the profits as dividends to shareholders, shareholders will have to pay taxes on dividends.
Assume shareholders are taxed @20% on dividend income or 20% of $750 = $150
Total tax = 250 + 150 = $400 or 40%
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Hybrid (S-Type Corporations)
S-Type Corporations Benefits
Limited liability Taxed as partnership
Limitations Owners must be people Can’t be used for joint ventures between
two corporations
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Hybrid (Limited Liability Corporations - LLC)
Limited Liability Corporations (LLC) Benefits
Limited liability Taxed like a partnership
Limitations Qualifications vary from state to state
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. Role of Financial Manager in a Corporation
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The Role of the Financial Manager in a Corporation (figure 1.1)
HOW THE FINANCE AREA FITS INTO A CORPORATION
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The Role of the Financial Manager in a Corporation (figure 1.1)
We focus on the duties generally associated with the treasurer and how investment decisions are made.
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Role of finance in Business
Where to invest (capital budgeting decision)
How to raise money (Capital structure decision)
How to manage cash flows from daily operations (Working Capital decision)
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. Income Taxation
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Income Taxation Objectives:
Raise revenues for government expenditures
Achieve socially desirable goals
Economic stabilization
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Types of Taxpayers Individual
Includes employees, self-employed persons, members of partnerships
Reports income on personal tax return Corporation
Reports its income and pays tax on profits Distributed dividends taxed to shareholders
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Computing Taxable Income for Corporation
Taxable Income Gross income less tax deductible expenses, plus
interest income and dividend income Gross Income
Dollar sales from a product or service less cost of production or acquisition
Tax Deductible Expenses Operating expenses (marketing, depreciation,
administrative expenses) and interest expense
Dividends paid are not deductible
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Computing Taxable Income ($000’s)
Sales $50,000Cost of Goods Sold 23,000Gross Profit $27,000Operating Expenses
Administrative Expenses $4,000Depreciation Expense 1,500Marketing Expenses 4,500Total Operating Expenses $10,000
Operating Income $17,000Other Income 0Interest Expense 1,000Taxable Income $16,000
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Corporate Tax Rates
Income Rate$ 0 - $50,000 15%$50,001 - $75,000 25%$75,001 - $10,000,000 34%Over $10,000,000 35%
Additional surtax: 5% on income between $100,000 and $335,000 3% on income between $15,000,000 and
$18,333,333
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Example: Computing taxes on taxable income of $16m
$50,000 * .15 = 7,500$25,000 * .25 = 6,250$9,925,000 * .34 = 3,374,500$6,000,000 * .35 = 2,100,000Surtax
.05*($335K-$100K) = 11,750
.03*($16m - $15m) = 30,000
Total Tax = $5,530,000
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Marginal Tax Rates
Refers to the tax rate applicable to next dollar of income. In the previous example, the marginal tax
rate is 38% since $16m falls into the 35% tax bracket with a 3% surtax.
In financial decision-making, marginal tax rate is more relevant than average tax rate.
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• Finance and Multinational Firm
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Why do companies go abroad?
To increase revenues
To obtain cheaper resources (land, labor, capital, raw material)
To reduce the burden of government regulation (ex. Environmental laws, taxes, labor laws)
To increase global exposure
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Risks/challenges
Country risk (changes in government regulations, unstable government, economic changes)
Currency risk (fluctuations in exchange rates)
Cultural risk (differences in language, traditions, ethical standards etc.)
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Finance and the Multinational Firm U.S. corporations are looking to international expansion
to discover profits For example, Coca-Cola earns over 80% of its profits from
overseas sales
In addition to US firms going abroad, we have also witnessed many foreign firms making their mark in the United States (ex. the domination of the auto industry by Honda, Toyota, and Nissan)
International movement has been spurred by: Collapse of communism Acceptance of free market system developing in Third
World countries Technology and communication (PC’s and the internet) Improved transportation