1 / 41

Lecture # 1

Lecture # 1. Financial Management. Definition. Financial Management entails planning for the future for a person or a business enterprise to ensure a positive Cash flow. It includes the administration and maintenance of financial assets. Besides, financial management covers

Download Presentation

Lecture # 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture # 1 • Financial Management

  2. Definition • Financial Management entails planning • for the future for a person or a business • enterprise to ensure a positive • Cash flow. It includes the administration • and maintenance of financial assets. • Besides, financial management covers • the process of identifying and managing • risk.

  3. Goal of Financial Management • The goal of financial management is to maximize the current value per share of existing stock. • To save company from any type of risk.

  4. Financial Goals of the Corporation • The primary financial goal is shareholder wealth maximization, which translates to maximizing stock price. • Do firms have any responsibilities to society at large? • Is stock price maximization good or bad for society? • Should firms behave ethically?

  5. Developments in Financial Management • Early 1900s - emphasis was on the legal aspects of mergers, the formation of new firms, and the various types of securities firms could issue to raise capital • During the depressions of the 1930s - emphasis shifted to bankruptcy and reorganisation, to corporate liquidity, and tothe regulation of security markets

  6. Developments in Financial Management • During the 1940s and early 1950s – finance continued to be taught as a descriptive, institutional subject, viewed more from the standpoint of an outsider rather than from that of a manager • Late 1950s – focus shifted to managerial decisions regarding the choice of assets and liabilities with the goal of maximizing the value of the firm • 1990s to date – focus on value maximization continued but two trends have become increasingly important: the globalization of business and the increased use of information technology

  7. Scope of Financial Management • Money and capital markets - which deals with securities markets and financial institutions; • Investments - which focuses on the decisions made by both individual and institutional investors as they choose securities for their investment portfolios; • Financial management - or ‘business finance’, which involves decisions within firms.

  8. FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT DECISIONS • Capital budgeting: The process of planning and managing a firm’s long term investment. • Capital structure: The mixture of debt and equity maintained by the firm. • Working capital management: A firms short terms asset and liabilities.

  9. Average Return on Investment • Advantages • Disadvantages

  10. Payback Method • # Years required to recover the original investment • Example: • YearNet IncomeCash FlowCumulative CF • 1 6,000 26,000 26,000 • 2 8,000 28,000 54,000 • 3 11,000 31,000 85,000 • 4 13,000 33,000 118,000 • 5 16,000 36,000 154,000 • 6 18,000 18,000 172,000 • Payback = 3 + 100,000 - 85,000 • 118,000 - 85,000 = 3.45 Years

  11. Advantages Disadvantages Payback Method

  12. Time Value of Money • FV = PV (1 + r)n • Compounding: Finding FV • Discounting: Finding PV: PV = FV/(1 + r) n • Internal Rate of Return: Finding r

  13. Net Present Value • NPV = Present Value of All Future Cash Flows less Inital Cost • = CF1 + CF2 + CF3 +.......CFn - Io • 1+r (1+r)2 (1+r)3 (1+r)n

  14. Net Present Value - Example • YearCFDisc. FactorPV • 0 -100000 1 -100000 • 1 26000 1/1.1 = .9091 23637 • 2 28000 1/(1.1)2 = .8264 23139 • 3 31000 1/(1.1)3 = .7573 23290 • 4 33000 1/(1.1)4 = .6830 22539 • 5 36000 1/(1.1)5 = .6209 22352 • 6 18000 1/(1.1)6 = .5645 10161 • NPV = 25121

  15. Advantages Disadvantages Net Present Value

  16. Internal Rate of Return • Discount rate that makes NPV Zero (i.e., that equates PV of benefits with the cost). • IRR: Io = CF1 + CF2 + ..... + CFn • 1+r (1+r)2 (1+r)n • Solve for r. • Example: • 100,000= 26000 + 28000 + 31000 + .......... + 18000 • 1+r (1+r)2 (1+r)3 (1+r)6 • r = 18.2%

  17. Advantages Disadvantages Internal Rate of Return

  18. Profitability Index PI = PV of all Benefits PV of all Cost Example: PV (Benefits) = 26000+28000 +.......... + 18000 1.1 (1.1)2 (1.1)6 = 125121 PV (Cost) = 100000 PI = 125121 = 1.25 100000

  19. Profitability Index • Advantages: • Disadvantages:

  20. NPV Profile • YearCFDisc. FactorPV • 0 -100,000 1 -100,000 • 1 26,000 0.91 23,636 • 2 28,000 0.83 23,140 • 3 31,000 1/(1.1)3 = .7573 23,291 • 4 33,000 1/(1.1)4 = .6830 22,539 • 5 36,000 1/(1.1)5 = .6209 22,352 • 6 18,000 1/(1.1)6 = .5645 10,161 • NPV = 25,121

  21. NPV Profile • Dis. RateNPV • 0% 7200 • 5% 45725.7 • 10% 25120.76 • 15% 8711.838 • 20% -4538.97 • 25% -15376.1

  22. NPV Profile • 80000 • 60000 • 40000 • 20000 • 0 • -20000 • 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 • Disc. Rate NPV

  23. Choosing Between Projects • YearCF(A)CF(B) • 0 -25000 -25000 • 1 2000 21000 • 2 2000 10000 • 3 35000 2000 • NPV 6351 4606 • IRR 17% 22%

  24. Modified IRR • Reinvestment Rate Assumption (Project A) • Project  Outlay  25,000 • Cash Flows: YR1  2,000                     YR2  2,000                     YR3  35,000 •     NPV @ 8%: 6,351  IRR: 17%

  25. Modified IRR • NPV: Project A •     YR1:   2,000     YR2:   2,000 + 2,000 + 160 = 4,160    YR3:   35,000 + 4,160 + 333 = 39,493 • [Note: PV of 39,493, three years from now @ 8% =  31,351                                                          Less: outlay  25,000 • NPV  6,351]

  26. Modified IRR • IRR @ 17%    YR1:   2,000   = 2,000     YR2:   2,000 + 2,000 + 340 = 4,340     YR3:   35,000 + 4,340 + 738 = 40,078 • [25,000 invested for three years @ 17% = 25,000(1.17)3 = 40,040]

  27. Modified IRR • Modified Internal Rate of Return • Find k such that   (1+k)nI0  = Final value •     i.e.     (1+k)3 25000  = 39,439                                  k  = 16.5%

  28. Modified IRR • Reinvestment Rate Assumption (Project B) • Project  Outlay  25,000 • Cash Flows: YR1  21,000                     YR2  10,000                     YR3  2,000 •     NPV @ 8%: 4,606  IRR: 22.12%

  29. Modified IRR • NPV: Project B • YR1: 21,000 = 21,000        YR2: 10,000 + 21,000 + 1,680 = 32,680         YR3:  2,000 + 32,680 + 2,614   = 37,294 • [Note: PV of 37,294, three years from now @ 8% =  29,606                                                        Less: outlay  25,000 NPV  4,606 ]

  30. Modified IRR • IRR of 22.12% •   YR1:   21,000    = 21,000         YR2:   10,000 + 21,000 + 4,645 = 35,645         YR3:   2,000 + 35,645 + 7,885 = 45,530 • [25,000 invested for three years @ 22.12% = 25,000(1.2212)3 = 45,530]

  31. Modified IRR • Modified Internal Rate of Return • Find k such that   (1+k)nI0  = Final value •             i.e.     (1+k)3 25000  = 37,294                                           k  = 14.26%

  32. Estimating Cash Flows • NPV = CF1+ CF2 +.............. + CFn - Io • l+r (l+r)2 (l+r)n • Cash Flows Incremental • After Tax • Net Working Capital • Sunk Costs

  33. Procedure • 1. Initial Costs: New CAPEX • Additional W. Cap • Sale of Old Assets • 2. Annual Costs: Revenue Less Costs • After Tax • 3. Terminal Cash Flows: Salvage Value • Recoupment of NWC

  34. Cash Flow Estimates • Sale of Existing Plant • CF= Selling Price + T (B.V. - S.P.) • Annual Cash Flows • OCF= (Sales-Cost)(1-T) + T, DEPREC • or • OCF= Net Inc + Depreciation

  35. New Product Proposal • Annual Sales $20m • Annual Costs $16m • Net Working Capital $2m • Plant Site $0.5m • Plant and Equipment $10m • Depreciation Straight Line over 20 years • Salvage Value nil • Tax Rate 40% • Required Return 8%

  36. New Product Proposal • INITIAL CASH FLOWS • ANNUAL CASH FLOWS

  37. New Product Proposal • TERMINAL CASH FLOWS • CALCULATION

  38. Evaluating Capital Projects • 1) Focus on Cash Flow, Not Profits. • Cash Flow = Economic Reality. • Profits Can Be Managed. • 2) Carefully Estimate Expected Future Cash Flows. • 3) Select a Discount Rate Consistent with the Risk of Those Future Cash Flows. • 4) Account for the Time Value of Money. • 5) Compute a “Base-Case” NPV.

  39. Evaluating Capital Projects • 6) Net Present Value = Value Created or Destroyed by the Project. • NPV is the Amount by which the Value of the Firm Will Change if you Undertake the Project. • 7)Identify Risks and Uncertainties. Run a Sensitivity Analysis. • Identify “Key Value Drivers.” • Identify Breakeven Assumptions. • Estimate Scenario Values. • Bound the Range of Value

  40. Evaluating Capital Projects • 8) Identify Qualitative Issues. • Flexibility • Quality • Know-How • Learning • 9) Decide

More Related