Tài chính doanh nghiệp - Chapter 1: The role and environment of managerial finance
Major Areas & Opportunities in
Finance: Managerial Finance (cont.)
• Increasing globalization has complicated
the financial management function by
requiring them to be proficient in
managing cash flows in different
currencies and protecting against the risks
inherent in international transactions.
• Changing economic and regulatory
conditions also complicate the financial
management function
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Chapter 1
The Role and
Environment
of Managerial
Finance
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-2
What is Finance?
• Finance can be defined as the art and
science of managing money.
• Finance is concerned with the process,
institutions, markets, and instruments
involved in the transfer of money among
individuals, businesses, and governments.
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Major Areas & Opportunities in
Finance: Financial Services
• Financial Services is the area of finance
concerned with the design and delivery of
advice and financial products to
individuals, businesses, and government.
• Career opportunities include banking,
personal financial planning, investments,
real estate, and insurance.
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Major Areas & Opportunities in
Finance: Managerial Finance
• Managerial finance is concerned with
the duties of the financial manager in the
business firm.
• The financial manager actively manages the
financial affairs of any type of business, whether
private or public, large or small, profit-seeking or
not-for-profit.
• They are also more involved in developing
corporate strategy and improving the firm’s
competitive position.
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Major Areas & Opportunities in
Finance: Managerial Finance (cont.)
• Increasing globalization has complicated
the financial management function by
requiring them to be proficient in
managing cash flows in different
currencies and protecting against the risks
inherent in international transactions.
• Changing economic and regulatory
conditions also complicate the financial
management function.
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Legal Forms of Business Organization
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Corporate Organization
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Other Limited Liability Organizations
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Career Opportunities
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The Managerial Finance Function
• The size and importance of the managerial
finance function depends on the size of the firm.
• In small companies, the finance function may
be performed by the company president or
accounting department.
• As the business expands, finance typically
evolves into a separate department linked to the
president as was previously described in
Figure 1.1.
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The Managerial Finance Function:
Relationship to Economics
• The field of finance is actually an
outgrowth of economics.
• In fact, finance is sometimes referred to as
financial economics.
• Financial managers must understand the
economic framework within which they
operate in order to react or anticipate to
changes in conditions.
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The Managerial Finance Function:
Relationship to Economics (cont.)
• The primary economic principal used by
financial managers is marginal cost-
benefit analysis which says that financial
decisions should be implemented only
when added benefits exceed added costs.
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The Managerial Finance Function:
Relationship to Accounting
• The firm’s finance (treasurer) and
accounting (controller) functions are
closely-related and overlapping.
• In smaller firms, the financial manager
generally performs both functions.
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The Managerial Finance Function:
Relationship to Accounting (cont.)
• One major difference in perspective and
emphasis between finance and
accounting is that accountants generally
use the accrual method while in finance,
the focus is on cash flows.
• The significance of this difference
can be illustrated using the following
simple example.
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Sales $100,000 (1 yacht sold, 100% still uncollected)
Costs $ 80,000 (all paid in full under supplier terms)
The Managerial Finance Function:
Relationship to Accounting (cont.)
• The Nassau Corporation experienced the
following activity last year:
• Now contrast the differences in
performance under the accounting method
versus the cash method.
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INCOME STATEMENT SUMMARY
ACCRUAL CASH
Sales $100,000 $ 0
Less: Costs (80,000) (80,000)
Net Profit/(Loss) $ 20,000 $(80,000)
The Managerial Finance Function:
Relationship to Accounting (cont.)
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The Managerial Finance Function:
Relationship to Accounting (cont.)
• Finance and accounting also differ with respect
to decision-making.
• While accounting is primarily concerned with the
presentation of financial data, the financial
manager is primarily concerned with analyzing
and interpreting this information for decision-
making purposes.
• The financial manager uses this data as a vital
tool for making decisions about the financial
aspects of the firm.
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Primary Activities of
the Financial Manager
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Investment Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total (years 1-3)
Rotor 1.40$ 1.00$ 0.40$ 2.80$
Valve 0.60$ 1.00$ 1.40$ 3.00$
Earnings per share (EPS)
Which Investment is Preferred?
Goal of the Firm: Maximize Profit???
• Profit maximization fails to account for differences in the
level of cash flows (as opposed to profits), the timing of
these cash flows, and the risk of these cash flows.
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Share Price = Future Dividends
Required Return
level & timing
of cash flows
risk of cash
flows
Goal of the Firm:
Maximize Shareholder Wealth!!!
• Why?
• Because maximizing shareholder wealth properly
considers cash flows, the timing of these cash flows,
and the risk of these cash flows.
• This can be illustrated using the following simple stock
valuation equation:
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Goal of the Firm:
Maximize Shareholder Wealth!!! (cont.)
• The process of shareholder wealth
maximization can be described using the
following flow chart:
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Goal of the Firm:
What About Other Stakeholders?
• Stakeholders include all groups of individuals who have
a direct economic link to the firm including employees,
customers, suppliers, creditors, owners, and others who
have a direct economic link to the firm.
• The "Stakeholder View" prescribes that the firm make a
conscious effort to avoid actions that could be
detrimental to the wealth position of its stakeholders.
• Such a view is considered to be "socially responsible."
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Corporate Governance
• Corporate Governance is the system used to
direct and control a corporation.
• It defines the rights and responsibilities of key
corporate participants such as shareholders, the
board of directors, officers and managers, and
other stakeholders.
• The structure of corporate governance was
previously described in Figure 1.1.
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Individual versus Institutional Investors
• Individual investors are investors who purchase
relatively small quantities of shares in order to earn a
return on idle funds, build a source of retirement income,
or provide financial security.
• Institutional investors are investment professionals who
are paid to manage other people’s money.
• They hold and trade large quantities of securities for
individuals, businesses, and governments and tend to
have a much greater impact on corporate governance.
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The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
• The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (commonly called
SOX) eliminated many disclosure and conflict of interest
problems that surfaced during the early 2000s.
• SOX:
– established an oversight board to monitor the
accounting industry;
– tightened audit regulations and controls;
– toughened penalties against executives who commit
corporate fraud;
– strengthened accounting disclosure requirements;
– established corporate board structure guidelines.
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The Role of Ethics: Ethics Defined
• Ethics is the standards of conduct or
moral judgment—have become an
overriding issue in both our society and
the financial community
• Ethical violations attract
widespread publicity
• Negative publicity often leads to negative
impacts on a firm
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The Role of Ethics: Considering Ethics
• Robert A. Cooke, a noted ethicist, suggests that
the following questions be used to assess the
ethical viability of a proposed action:
– Does the action unfairly single out an individual
or group?
– Does the action affect the morals, or legal rights of
any individual or group?
– Does the action conform to accepted
moral standards?
– Are there alternative courses of action that are less
likely to cause actual or potential harm?
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The Role of Ethics:
Considering Ethics (cont.)
• Cooke suggests that the impact of a proposed decision
should be evaluated from a number of perspectives:
– Are the rights of any stakeholder being violated?
– Does the firm have any overriding duties to any stakeholder?
– Will the decision benefit any stakeholder to the detriment of
another stakeholder?
– If there is a detriment to any stakeholder, how should it be
remedied, if at all?
– What is the relationship between stockholders
and stakeholders?
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The Role of Ethics:
Ethics & Share Price
• Ethics programs seek to:
– reduce litigation and judgment costs
– maintain a positive corporate image
– build shareholder confidence
– gain the loyalty and respect of
all stakeholders
• The expected result of such programs is
to positively affect the firm's share price.
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The Agency Issue:
The Agency Problem
• Whenever a manager owns less than 100% of the firm’s
equity, a potential agency problem exists.
• In theory, managers would agree with shareholder
wealth maximization.
• However, managers are also concerned with their
personal wealth, job security, fringe benefits,
and lifestyle.
• This would cause managers to act in ways that do not
always benefit the firm shareholders.
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The Agency Issue:
Resolving the Problem
• Market Forces such as major
shareholders and the threat of a hostile
takeover act to keep managers in check.
• Agency Costs are the costs borne by
stockholders to maintain a corporate
governance structure that minimizes
agency problems and contributes to the
maximization of shareholder wealth.
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The Agency Issue:
Resolving the Problem (cont.)
• Examples would include bonding or
monitoring management behavior, and
structuring management compensation to
make shareholders interests their own.
• A stock option is an incentive allowing
managers to purchase stock at the market
price set at the time of the grant.
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The Agency Issue:
Resolving the Problem (cont.)
• Performance plans tie management
compensation to measures such as EPS
growth; performance shares and/or cash
bonuses are used as compensation under
these plans.
• Recent studies have failed to find a strong
relationship between CEO compensation
and share price.
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Financial Institutions & Markets
• Firms that require funds from external
sources can obtain them in three ways:
– through a bank or other financial institution
– through financial markets
– through private placements
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Financial Institutions & Markets:
Financial Institutions
• Financial institutions are intermediaries that
channel the savings of individuals, businesses,
and governments into loans or investments.
• The key suppliers and demanders of funds are
individuals, businesses, and governments.
• In general, individuals are net suppliers of
funds, while businesses and governments are
net demanders of funds.
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Financial Institutions & Markets:
Financial Markets
• Financial markets provide a forum in which
suppliers of funds and demanders of funds can
transact business directly.
• The two key financial markets are the money
market and the capital market.
• Transactions in short term marketable securities
take place in the money market while
transactions in long-term securities take place in
the capital market.
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Financial Institutions & Markets:
Financial Markets (cont.)
• Whether subsequently traded in the money or
capital market, securities are first issued through
the primary market.
• The primary market is the only one in which a
corporation or government is directly involved in
and receives the proceeds from the transaction.
• Once issued, securities then trade on the
secondary markets such as the New York
Stock Exchange or NASDAQ.
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The Relationship between Financial
Institutions and Financial Markets
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The Money Market
• The money market exists as a result of the
interaction between the suppliers and
demanders of short-term funds (those having
a maturity of a year or less).
• Most money market transactions are made in
marketable securities which are short-term
debt instruments such as T-bills and
commercial paper.
• Money market transactions can be executed
directly or through an intermediary.
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The Money Market (cont.)
• The international equivalent of the
domestic (U.S.) money market is the
Eurocurrency market.
• The Eurocurrency market is a market for
short-term bank deposits denominated in U.S.
dollars or other marketable currencies.
• The Eurocurrency market has grown rapidly
mainly because it is unregulated and because it
meets the needs of international borrowers
and lenders.
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The Capital Market
• The capital market is a market that enables suppliers
and demanders of long-term funds to make transactions.
• The key capital market securities are bonds (long-term
debt) and both common and preferred stock (equity).
• Bonds are long-term debt instruments used by
businesses and government to raise large sums of
money or capital.
• Common stock are units of ownership interest or equity
in a corporation.
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Major Securities Exchanges:
Organized Exchanges
• Organized securities exchanges are tangible
secondary markets where outstanding securities
are bought and sold.
• They account for about 46% of the total dollar
volume of domestic shares traded.
• Only the largest and most profitable companies
meet the requirements necessary to be listed
on the New York Stock Exchange.
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Major Securities Exchanges:
Organized Exchanges (cont.)
• Only those that own a seat on the
exchange can make transactions on the
floor (there are currently 1,366 seats).
• Trading is conducted through an auction
process where specialists “make a
market” in selected securities.
• As compensation for executing orders,
specialists make money on the spread
(bid price – ask price).
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Major Securities Exchanges:
Over-the-Counter Exchange
• The over-the-counter (OTC) market is an
intangible market for securities transactions.
• Unlike organized exchanges, the OTC is both a
primary market and a secondary market.
• The OTC is a computer-based market where
dealers make a market in selected securities
and are linked to buyers and sellers through the
NASDAQ System.
• Dealers also make money on the “spread.”
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Major Securities Exchanges:
International Capital Markets
• In the Eurobond market, corporations and
governments typically issue bonds denominated
in dollars and sell them to investors located
outside the United States.
• The foreign bond market is a market for
foreign bonds, which are bonds issued by a
foreign corporation or government that is
denominated in the investor’s home currency
and sold in the investor’s home market.
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Major Securities Exchanges:
International Capital Markets (cont.)
• Finally, the international equity market
allows corporations to sell blocks of
shares to investors in a number of
different countries simultaneously.
• This market enables corporations to raise
far larger amounts of capital than they
could raise in any single national market.
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The Role of Securities Exchanges
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Business Taxes
• Both individuals and businesses must pay taxes
on income.
• The income of sole proprietorships and partnerships is
taxed as the income of the individual owners, whereas
corporate income is subject to corporate taxes.
• Both individuals and businesses can earn two types of
income—ordinary income and capital gains income.
• Under current law, tax treatment of ordinary income and
capital gains income change frequently due frequently
changing tax laws.
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Example
Calculate federal income taxes due if taxable income is $80,000.
Tax = .15 ($50,000) + .25 ($25,000) + .34 ($80,000 - $75,000)
Tax = $15,450
Business Taxes: Ordinary Income
• Ordinary income is earned through the sale of a
firm’s goods or services and is taxed at the rates
depicted in Table 1.4 on the following slide.
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Business Taxation: Ordinary Income
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Example
What is the marginal and average tax rate for the previous example?
Marginal Tax Rate = 34%
Average Tax Rate = $15,450/$80,000 = 19.31%
Business Taxation:
Average & Marginal Tax Rates
• A firm’s marginal tax rate represents the
rate at which additional income is taxed.
• The average tax rate is the firm’s taxes
divided by taxable income.
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Business Taxation:
Tax on Interest & Dividend Income
• For corporations only, 70% of all dividend
income received from an investment in the stock
of another corporation in which the firm has less
than 20% ownership is excluded from taxation.
• This exclusion is provided to avoid triple
taxation for corporations.
• Unlike dividend income, all interest income
received is fully taxed.
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Example
Two companies, Debt Co. and No Debt Co., both
expect in the coming year to have EBIT of $200,000.
During the year, Debt Co. will have to pay $30,000 in
interest expenses. No Debt Co. has no debt and will
pay not interest expenses.
Business Taxation:
Debt versus Equity Financing
• In calculating taxes, corporations may deduct operating
expenses and interest expense but not dividends paid.
• This creates a built-in tax advantage for using debt
financing as the following example will demonstrate.
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Business Taxation:
Debt versus Equity Financing (cont.)
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Business Taxation:
Debt versus Equity Financing (cont.)
• As the example shows, the use of debt
financing can increase cash flow and
EPS, and decrease taxes paid.
• The tax deductibility of interest and other
certain expenses reduces their actual
(after-tax) cost to the profitable firm.
• It is the non-deductibility of dividends paid
that results in double taxation under the
corporate form of organization.
1-56
Business Taxation: Capital Gains
• A capital gain results when a firm sells an asset
such as a stock held as an investment for more
than its initial purchase price.
• The difference between the sales price and the
purchase price is called a capital gain.
• For corporations, capital gains are added to
ordinary income and taxed like ordinary income
at the firm’s marginal tax rate.
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