fm11 ch 01 final

41
1 - 1 CHAPTER 1 Overview of Financial Management and the Financial Environment Financial management Forms of business organization Objective of the firm: Maximize wealth Determinants of stock pricing The financial environment Financial instruments, markets and institutions Interest rates and yield curves

Upload: waqaswicky

Post on 12-Mar-2015

86 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 1

CHAPTER 1Overview of Financial Management

and the Financial Environment Financial management

Forms of business organization

Objective of the firm: Maximize wealth

Determinants of stock pricing

The financial environment

Financial instruments, markets and institutions

Interest rates and yield curves

Page 2: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 2

Why is corporate finance important to all managers?

Corporate finance provides the skills managers need to:

Identify and select the corporate strategies and individual projects that add value to their firm.

Forecast the funding requirements of their company, and devise strategies for acquiring those funds.

Page 3: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 3

Sole proprietorship

Partnership

Corporation

What are some forms of business organization a company might have as

it evolves from a start-up to a major corporation?

Page 4: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 4

Advantages:

Ease of formation

Subject to few regulations

No corporate income taxes Disadvantages:

Limited life

Unlimited liability

Difficult to raise capital to support growth

Starting as a Sole Proprietorship

Page 5: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 5

A partnership has roughly the same advantages and disadvantages as a sole proprietorship.

Starting as or Growing into a Partnership

Page 6: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 6

Becoming a Corporation

A corporation is a legal entity separate from its owners and managers.

File papers of incorporation with state.

Charter

Bylaws

Page 7: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 7

Advantages:

Unlimited life

Easy transfer of ownership

Limited liability

Ease of raising capital Disadvantages:

Double taxation

Cost of set-up and report filing

Advantages and Disadvantages of a Corporation

Page 8: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 8

Becoming a Public Corporation and Growing Afterwards

Initial Public Offering (IPO) of Stock

Raises cash

Allows founders and pre-IPO investors to “harvest” some of their wealth

Subsequent issues of debt and equity

Agency problem: managers may act in their own interests and not on behalf of owners (stockholders)

Page 9: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 9

The primary objective should be shareholder wealth maximization, which translates to maximizing stock price.

Should firms behave ethically? YES!

Do firms have any responsibilities to society at large? YES! Shareholders are also members of society.

What should management’s primary objective be?

Page 10: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 10

Is maximizing stock price good for society, employees, and customers?

Employment growth is higher in firms that try to maximize stock price. On average, employment goes up in:

firms that make managers into owners (such as LBO firms)

firms that were owned by the government but that have been sold to private investors

Page 11: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 11

Consumer welfare is higher in capitalist free market economies than in communist or socialist economies.

Fortune lists the most admired firms. In addition to high stock returns, these firms have:

high quality from customers’ view

employees who like working there

Page 12: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 12

Amount of expected cash flows (bigger is better)

Timing of the cash flow stream (sooner is better)

Risk of the cash flows (less risk is better)

What three aspects of cash flows affect an investment’s value?

Page 13: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 13

What are “free cash flows (FCF)”

Free cash flows are the cash flows that are:

Available (or free) for distribution

To all investors (stockholders and creditors)

After paying current expenses, taxes, and making the investments necessary for growth.

Page 14: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 14

Determinants of Free Cash Flows

Sales revenuesCurrent level

Short-term growth rate in sales

Long-term sustainable growth rate in sales

Operating costs (raw materials, labor, etc.) and taxes

Required investments in operations (buildings, machines, inventory, etc.)

Page 15: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 15

What is the weighted average cost of capital (WACC)?

The weighted average cost of capital (WACC) is the average rate of return required by all of the company’s investors (stockholders and creditors)

Page 16: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 16

What factors affect the weighted average cost of capital?

Capital structure (the firm’s relative amounts of debt and equity)

Interest rates

Risk of the firm

Stock market investors’ overall attitude toward risk

Page 17: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 17

What determines a firm’s value?

A firm’s value is the sum of all the future expected free cash flows when converted into today’s dollars:

)WACC1(

FCF....

)WACC1(

FCF

)WACC1(

FCFValue

22

11

Page 18: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 18

What are financial assets?

A financial asset is a contract that entitles the owner to some type of payoff.DebtEquity

In general, each financial asset involves two parties, a provider of cash (i.e., capital) and a user of cash.

Page 19: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 19

What are some financial instruments?

Instrument Rate (April 2003)

U.S. T-bills 1.14%

Banker’s acceptances 1.22

Commercial paper 1.21

Negotiable CDs 1.24

Eurodollar deposits 1.23

Commercial loans Tied to prime (4.25%) or LIBOR (1.29%)

(More . .)

Page 20: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 20

Financial Instruments (Continued)

Instrument Rate (April 2003)

U.S. T-notes and T-bonds5.04%

Mortgages 5.57

Municipal bonds 4.84

Corporate (AAA) bonds 5.91

Preferred stocks 6 to 9%

Common stocks (expected) 9 to 15%

Page 21: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 21

Who are the providers (savers) and users (borrowers) of capital?

Households: Net saversNon-financial corporations: Net

users (borrowers)Governments: Net borrowersFinancial corporations: Slightly

net borrowers, but almost breakeven

Page 22: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 22

Direct transfer (e.g., corporation issues commercial paper to insurance company)

Through an investment banking house (e.g., IPO)

Through a financial intermediary (e.g., individual deposits money in bank, bank makes commercial loan to a company)

What are three ways that capital is transferred between savers and

borrowers?

Page 23: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 23

Commercial banks

Savings & Loans

Life insurance companies

Mutual funds

Pension funds

What are some financial intermediaries?

Page 24: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 24

The Top 5 Banking Companiesin the World, 12/2001

Bank Name Country

Citigroup U.S.

Deutsche Bank AG Germany

Credit Suisse Switzerland

BNP Paribas France

Bank of America U.S.

Page 25: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 25

What are some types of markets?

A market is a method of exchanging one asset (usually cash) for another asset.

Physical assets vs. financial assets

Spot versus future markets

Money versus capital markets

Primary versus secondary markets

Page 26: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 26

How are secondary markets organized?

By “location”Physical location exchangesComputer/telephone networks

By the way that orders from buyers and sellers are matchedOpen outcry auctionDealers (i.e., market makers)Electronic communications

networks (ECNs)

Page 27: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 27

Physical Location vs. Computer/telephone Networks

Physical location exchanges: e.g., NYSE, AMEX, CBOT, Tokyo Stock Exchange

Computer/telephone: e.g., Nasdaq, government bond markets, foreign exchange markets

Page 28: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 28

Dealer Markets

“Dealers” keep an inventory of the stock (or other financial asset) and place bid and ask “advertisements, (prices at which they are willing to buy and sell).

Computerized quotation system keeps track of bid and ask prices, but does not automatically match buyers and sellers.

Examples: Nasdaq National Market, German Neuer Markt.

Page 29: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 29

Electronic Communications Networks (ECNs)

ECNs:Computerized system matches

orders from buyers and sellers and automatically executes transaction.

Examples: Instinet (US, stocks), Eurex (Swiss-German, futures contracts),

Page 30: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 30

What do we call the price, or cost, of debt capital?

The interest rate

What do we call the price, or cost, of equity capital?

Required Dividend Capital return yield gain= + .

Page 31: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 31

Real versus Nominal Rates

r* = Real risk-free rate. T-bond rate if no inflation; 1% to 4%.

= Any nominal rate.

= Rate on Treasury securities.

r

rRF

Page 32: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 32

r = r* + IP + DRP + LP + MRP.

Here: r = Required rate of return on

a debt security. r* = Real risk-free rate. IP = Inflation premium.DRP = Default risk premium. LP = Liquidity premium.MRP = Maturity risk premium.

Page 33: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 33

Premiums Added to r* for Different Types of Debt

ST Treasury: only IP for ST inflation

LT Treasury: IP for LT inflation, MRP

ST corporate: ST IP, DRP, LP

LT corporate: IP, DRP, MRP, LP

Page 34: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 34

What is the “term structure of interest rates”? What is a “yield curve”?

Term structure: the relationship between interest rates (or yields) and maturities.

A graph of the term structure is called the yield curve.

Page 35: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 35

Add the IPs and MRPs to r*:

rRFt = r* + IPt + MRPt .

rRF = Quoted market interestrate on treasury securities.

Assume r* = 3%:

rRF1 = 3% + 5% + 0.0% = 8.0%.rRF10 = 3% + 7.5% + 0.9% = 11.4%.rRF20 = 3% + 7.75% + 1.9% = 12.65%.

Page 36: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 36

Hypothetical Treasury Yield Curve

0

5

10

15

1 10 20

Years to Maturity

InterestRate (%) 1 yr 8.0%

10 yr 11.4%20 yr 12.65%

Real risk-free rate

Inflation premium

Maturity risk premium

Page 37: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 37

Factors shaping yield curve?

This constructed yield curve is upward sloping.

This is due to increasing expected inflation and an increasing maturity risk premium.

Page 38: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 38

The relationship between the Treasury yield curve and the yield curves for

corporate issues.

Corporate yield curves are higher than that of the Treasury bond.

The spread between a corporate yield and the Treasury yield widens as the corporate bond rating decreases.

Page 39: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 39

Treasury and Corporate Yield Curves

0

5

10

15

0 1 5 10 15 20

Years tomaturity

Interest Rate (%)

5.2%5.9%

6.0%Treasuryyield curve

BB-Rated

AAA-Rated

Page 40: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 40

What various types of risks arisewhen investing overseas?

Country risk: Arises from investing or doing business in a particular country. It depends on the country’s economic, political, and social environment.

Exchange rate risk: If investment is denominated in a currency other than the dollar, the investment’s value will depend on what happens to exchange rate.

Page 41: FM11 Ch 01 Final

1 - 41

What two factors lead to exchangerate fluctuations?

Changes in relative inflation will lead to changes in exchange rates.

An increase in country risk will also cause that country’s currency to fall.