comm308 intro winter 2015 lecture 1
DESCRIPTION
Concordia Comm308 Winter 2015 Lecture Notes Class 1TRANSCRIPT
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Course Web Pages
Syllabus, lecture notes and Assignments will be posted on “First Class”
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Introduction to Finance
Syllabus
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Introduction to Corporate Finance
Overview: Introduction; Outline
Chapter 1: Sections 1.2 to 1.4Chapter 2: Sections 2.1 to 2.4
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INTRODUCTION TO FINANCEOutline…
Asset Pricing Investor perspective Price formation in
capital markets
Investments Portfolio management CAPM (Capital Asset
Pricing Model)
Corporate Finance CEO perspective Financial decisions of the corporation
Capital Budgeting Capital Structure Working Capital Management
Finance
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What is Corporate Finance?
Financial decision making process of corporations Why focus on decisions made by
corporations? Other organizational forms: Sole proprietorship Partnership
How do these differ?
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Partnerships
Owned by few people Owners keep all profits But: unlimited liability (lose shirt) Limited life Insufficient capital (forgone opportunities) Difficult to transfer ownership Who is a limited partner?
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Corporations
Separate legal entity from its owners Owners are shareholders Separation of ownership and management Limited liability Ownership easily transferred Capital formation made easy Unlimited life Disadvantage - double taxation
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Cash Flows to and from the FirmLO5
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Investment and Financing Decisions
What to buy - Capital Budgeting Assets Real (tangible, intangible) Financial
How to pay for it - Capital Structure Mix of debt and equity
Buy low, sell high Theory of value
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Goals
Survive? Beat competition? Maximize sales/profits? Steady growth? Maximize stock price?
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Goals of a Financial Manager
Shareholders benefit if managers maximizecurrent value of existing stock (share price)
Management should select investments and capital structure that maximize stock value (easier said...)
Is market value of stock a good measure? Issues of Market Efficiency
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Problems???
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Quantitative uncertainties/Problems…
Today’s value of expected future cash flows
Time Matters
Tt
tt=0
( )=CF ( )
(1+k)
AssetValue aka NPV
PV GO
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What is the appropriate r?
...that k which reflects the riskiness of the cash flows
Risk Matters
k ca be understood as the conversion rate across time Different ways to refers to r
Opportunity cost of capital Required rate of return Cost of capital Appropriate discount rate Hurdle rate Capitalization rate Etc.
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Some human problems…
Corporation: A legal entity composed of one or more individuals or entities Three distinct interests: separation of
ownership and control Shareholders (ownership, principal) Board of Directors (control) Top Management (implementation, agent)
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Potential Problems: Between Claimants
Information Asymmetry Methods to manage:
Signaling Monitoring
Agency Problems: Goals of the parties are not aligned Agent someone who is hired to represent the principal’s
interest Equity: Potential conflict between shareholders and
managers (principal-agent problem) Traditional: Outside (non-management) shareholders Overvalued equity
Debt: Potential conflict between shareholders and debt holders
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Dilbert on Shareholder Value
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Agency Problem of Outside Equity
Managers expropriate wealth from shareholders Moral hazard problems Effort aversion Excessive perquisite consumption Underinvestment due to risk aversion/short
horizon Entrenchment Accept poor investment projects (NPV<0) Empire building Hubris Free Cash Flow (FCF)
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Ways to Manage Agency Problems Board of Directors
Outsiders versus insiders, CEO/Chairman role Composition of audit, nominating and compensation committees
Firm’s voting structure Dual class stocks Concentrated versus Disperse Ownership Outsiders versus Insiders
Incentives Options, performance shares Ownership of executive and directors
Takeover market Antitakeover provisions, regulations Ownership structure Going private?
Managerial labor market Judicial/Governmental review Monitoring function: Debt, Institutional Investors,
Blockholders20
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Statement of Financial Position
Assets = Liabilities + Shareholders’ Equity
Current assetsCurrent Liabilities
Common Stock
Assets Liabilities
Equity
Long-term debt
Fixed assets
Net Working Capital
Firm’s accounting value on particular date.
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Net Working Capital
Net Working Capital Current Assets – Current Liabilities Positive when the cash that will be
received over the next 12 months exceeds the cash that will be paid out Usually positive in a healthy firm
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Canadian Enterprises Statement of Financial Position – Table 2.1
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Statement of Comprehensive Income
The statement of comprehensive income is more like a video of the firm’s operations for a specified period of time. You generally report revenues first and
then deduct any expenses for the period Matching principle – IFRS say to show
revenue when it accrues and match the expenses required to generate the revenue
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Canadian Enterprises Statement of Comprehensive Income – Table 2.2
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Accounting and Finance
Market values not book values Stale prices mean bad decisions Imagine driving your car and only looking in
the rear-view mirror We like cash Non-cash items like depreciation lower net
income Sales booked increase income but customer
may not have paid yet
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Statement of Cash Flows
Cash flow is one of the most important pieces of information that a financial manager can derive from financial statements We will look at how cash is generated from
utilizing assets and how it is paid to those that finance the purchase of the assets
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Cash Flow From Assets
Cash Flow From Assets (CFFA) = Cash Flow to Bondholders + Cash Flow to Shareholders Cash Flow From Assets = Operating Cash
Flow – Net Capital Spending – Changes in NWC
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Example: Canadian Enterprises
Operating Cash Flow (I/S) = EBIT + depreciation – taxes = $509 Net Capital Spending (B/S and I/S) =
ending net fixed assets – beginning net fixed assets + depreciation = $130 Changes in NWC (B/S) = ending NWC
– beginning NWC = $330
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Example continued
Cash Flow From Assets (CFFA) = 509 – 130 – 330 = $49 CF to Creditors (B/S and I/S) = interest
paid – net new borrowing = $24 CF to Stockholders (B/S and I/S) =
dividends paid – net new equity raised = $25 CFFA = 24 + 25 = $49
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Taxes
Individual vs. corporate taxes
Marginal vs. average tax rates Marginal – the percentage paid on the next
dollar earned Average – the percentage of your income that
goes to pay taxes (tax bill / taxable income)
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Taxes on Investments
When an investor holds stocks, they are subject to two types of taxes: Dividend tax credit – A tax formula that
reduces the effective tax rate on dividends Capital gains tax – Tax is paid on the
investment’s increase in value over its purchase price
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