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Business Finance Management - Syllabus

• The course will draw on material from the following easily purchased text
book:
 Principles of Corporate Finance, 7th Edition, by Richard A. Brealey and
Stewart C. Myers, Publisher: McGraw Hill/Irwin
 Corporate Finance: Theory and Practice, 2nd Edition, by Aswath
Damodaran, Publisher: John Wiley and Sons
 Course material includes articles from the financial press

• Grading: Attendance/participation 10%


Quiz 30%
Final Exam 60%

• Quiz and final exams will be closed book, closed notes and no dictionaries

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Business Finance Management: Course outline

PPT

Business Finance Management


1 1-2
Chapter 1 Business Finance Management

 Basic objective of finance decisions

 Who is the financial manager?

 The Concept of Net Present Value

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Basic objective of business finance

• This course is about financial decisions by corporations.


• Before diving into business finance, we do need to establish what basic
objective we are trying to achieve when making financial decisions.
• In traditional business finance, the objective in decision making is to
maximize the value of the firm.
• A narrower objective is to maximize stockholder wealth. When the stock is
traded and markets are viewed to be efficient, the objective is to maximize
the stock price.
• All other goals of the firm are intermediate ones leading to firm value
maximization, or operate as constraints on firm value maximization.

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Basic objective of business finance (cont.)

Maximizing fi

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Basic objective of business finance (cont.)

• Why corporate financial theory focuses on maximizing stockholder wealth.


1. Stock price is easily observable and constantly updated (unlike other
measures of performance, which may not be as easily observable, and
certainly not updated as frequently).
2. If investors are rational (are they?), stock prices reflect the wisdom of
decisions, short term and long term, instantaneously.
3. The objective of stock price performance provides some very elegant
theory on:
• allocating resources across scarce uses (which investments to take
and which ones to reject)
• how to finance these investments
• how much to pay in dividends

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Basic objective of business finance (cont.)

• Is maximizing stock prices a too “narrow” an objective?


• A preliminary response
 Maximizing stock price is not incompatible with meeting employee
needs/objectives. In particular:
• Employees are often stockholders in many firms
• Firms that maximize stock price generally are firms that have
treated employees well.
 Maximizing stock price does not mean that customers are not critical to
success. In most businesses, keeping customers happy is the route to
stock price maximization.
 Maximizing stock price does not imply that a company has to be a
social outlaw.

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Basic objective of business finance (cont.)

• What about bond holders? Are they at a disadvantage if a firm has an


objective to maximize stock price?
 In theory: there is no conflict of interests between stockholders and
bondholders.
 In practice: Stockholder and bondholders have different objectives.
Bondholders are concerned most about safety and ensuring that they
get paid their claims. Stockholders are more likely to think about upside
potential.

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Basic objective of business finance (cont.)

• Maximizing share value versus social responsibility


• In theory: There are no costs associated with the firm that cannot be traced
to the firm and charged to it.
• In practice: Financial decisions can create social costs and benefits.
• A social cost or benefit is a cost or benefit that accrues to society as a
whole and NOT to the firm making the decision.
 environmental costs (pollution, health costs, etc..)
 quality of life costs (traffic, housing, safety, etc.)
• Examples of social benefits include:
 creating employment in areas with high unemployment
 supporting development in poor areas
 creating access to goods in areas where such access does not exist

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Basic objective of corporate finance (cont.)

• Social costs and benefits are difficult to quantify because ..


 they might not be known at the time of the decision
 they are 'person-specific' (different decision makers weight them
differently)
 they can be paralyzing if carried to extreme

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Basic objective of business finance (cont.)

• Traditional corporate financial theory breaks down when ...


 The interests/objectives of the decision makers in the firm conflict with
the interests of stockholders.
 Bondholders (Lenders) are not protected against expropriation by
stockholders.
 Financial markets do not operate efficiently, and stock prices do not
reflect the underlying value of the firm.
 Significant social costs can be created as a by-product of stock price
maximization.

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Basic objective of corporate finance (cont.)

• When traditional business financial theory breaks down, the solution is to


choose a different:
 mechanism for corporate governance
 objective and continue to maximize stock price, but reduce the potential
for conflict and breakdown
• Make managers (decision makers) and employees into stockholders
• Provide information honestly and promptly to financial markets

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Who is the financial manager?

(2) (1)

Firm's Financial Financial


(4a)
operations manager markets

(3) (4b)

(1) Cash raised from investors


(2) Cash invested in firm
(3) Cash generated by operations
(4a) Cash reinvested
(4b) Cash returned to investors

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Who is the financial manager? (cont.)

Chief Financial Officer

Treasurer Comptroller
Banking relationships Accounting
Cash management Preparation of financial statements
Obtaining financing Internal auditing
Credit management Payroll
Dividend disbursement Custody of records
Insurance Preparing budgets
Pensions management Taxes

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Net present value

• Before starting on net present value, we need to introduce present value.


• We can start with the premise that receiving $1 next year is worth less than
receiving $1 today.
• There are three reasons why a dollar tomorrow is worth less than a dollar
today:
1. Individuals prefer present consumption to future consumption. To induce
people to give up present consumption you have to offer them more in
the future.
2. When there is monetary inflation, the value of currency decreases over
time. The greater the inflation, the greater the difference in value
between a dollar today and a dollar tomorrow.
3. If there is any uncertainty (risk) associated with the cash flow in the
future, the less that cash flow will be valued.

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Net present value (cont.)

• If receiving $1 next year is worth less than receiving $1 today, how much
less is it?
• We will use the present value equation to arrive to a solution.

• Suppose you could invest P at an interest rate r.


• P1 or the value in one year would be P X (1+r)

• We can inverse the equation and say that P = P1 / (1 + r)

• P is the same as saying the value of P1 today or its Present Value is

PV = P1 / (1 + r)

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Net present value (cont.)

PV = P1 / (1 + r)
• Where 1 / (1+r) = Discount Factor
• We can also say that r = the rate of return demanded by investors for
receiving funds in the future.
• The rate of return is also called the discount rate, the hurdle rate, or the
opportunity cost of capital.
• Example. Suppose it will cost $350,000 to construct an office building which
can be sold for $400,000 next year if the discount rate is 7%
• What is the present value of the building?

PV = $400,000 / (1 + .07) = $373,832

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Net present value (cont.)
• The building sold for $400,000 in 1 year is worth $373,832 today.
• But the building required an investment of $350,000.
• We can say that the Net Present Value or NPV of the investment is :

NPV = -$350,000 + $373,832 = $23,832

• The NPV formula is:

NPV = C0 + C1/(1+r)

• C0 is the cash flow in year 0 or now and is often a negative number because we need
to invest.
• Because the NPV > 0, we will invest in the building construction and selling.
• We will investigate how to analyze “r” in a future lesson. For the moment, it is the
return that investors require for a certain type of investment.

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NPV vs. Rate of Return

• We decided that the construction of the building was a good idea because it
had an NPV > 0 or in other words the present value of its selling price in
one year is greater than the construction costs today.
• We can also calculate the return on the capital invested (also stated as the
return on investment.)

Return = profit / investment = (400,000 – 350,000)/350,000 = 14%

• Suppose that if we didn’t invest in the building and we invested in the stock
market. An average return in the stock market is about 12% (We will study
this too later in the course.)
• We could say that the 12% is the opportunity cost of capital.
• Deciding between the two alternatives, we would choose the building
because of its return of 14%

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NPV vs. Rate of Return (cont.)

• Here then we have two equivalent rules for capital investment:

1. Net Present Value Rule. Accept investments that have positive net present
values

2. Rate of Return Rule. Accept investments that offer rates of return above
their opportunity cost of capital

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Questions and problems

1. What basic objective do we recommend for finance decisions?

• In most cases we will want to maximize shareholder value or share price.

1. Stock price is easily observable and constantly updated (unlike other


measures of performance, which may not be as easily observable, and
certainly not updated as frequently).
2. If investors are rational (are they?), stock prices reflect the wisdom of
decisions, short term and long term, instantaneously.
3. The objective of stock price performance provides some very elegant
theory on:
 allocating resources across scarce uses (which investments to
take and which ones to reject)
 how to finance these investments
 how much to pay in dividends

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Questions and problems

2. What do we do when maximizing share price does not seem the best
objective?

• Choose a different mechanism for corporate governance


• Choose a different objective by focus. Yes, maximize stock price, but
reduce the potential for conflict and breakdown
 Make managers (decision makers) and employees into stockholders
 Provide information honestly and promptly to financial markets

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Questions and problems

3. The financial manager handles the two functions of treasury and


comptroller. In a large company they would be divided into two
departments. Describe the two functions.

Treasurer Comptroller
Banking relationships Accounting
Cash management Preparation of financial statements
Obtaining financing Internal auditing
Credit management Payroll
Dividend disbursement Custody of records
Insurance Preparing budgets
Pensions management Taxes

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Questions and problems

4. A merchant pays $100,000 for a load of grain and is certain that it can be
resold at the end of 1 year for $132,000.
a. What is the return on his investment?
b. If the return were less than the interest rate, does the investment have a
positive or negative NPV?
c. If the interest rate is 10% was is the present value of the investment?
d. What is the net present value?

a. Return = profit/investment = ($132,000 - $100,000) / $100,000 = 32%


b. Negative
c. PV = $132,000 / 1.10 = $120,000
d. NPV = -$100,000 + $120,000 = $20,000

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Questions and problems

4. What is the NPV rule? And the rate of return rule?

a. Net Present Value Rule. Accept investments that have positive net present
values

b. Rate of Return Rule. Accept investments that offer rates of return above
their opportunity cost of capital

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