The objective of the course is to provide an understanding of both the theory of corporate finance fundamentals and how it applies to the “real” world. The main focus of this course is on the corporate financial manger and how he/she reaches decisions. We will cover many issues that are important to a modern financial manager including various advance topics in corporate finance fundamentals such as the essential concepts and understanding of the uses of financial statements and cash flows, ratio analysis, financial planning and growth, time value of money, bonds and stocks valuation, and project valuation.
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Fundamental of Corporate Finance slideshare
1. Preah Kossomak Polytechnic Institute (PPI)
FUNDAMENTALS OFFUNDAMENTALS OF
CORPORATE FINANCECORPORATE FINANCE
Eighth Edition @2008
Stephen A. Ross
Randolph W. Westerfield
Bradford D. Jordan
Prepared and Taught by YIN SOKHNG, MFI
Website: www.morodorkkhmer.com
E-mail: info@morodorkkhmer.com
Tel: (855) 16889872 / 17989972
2. Chapter 1 Introduction to Corporate Finance
Chapter 2 Financial Statements, Taxes, and Cash Flow
Chapter 3 Working with Financial Statements
Chapter 4 Long-Term Financial Planning and Growth
Chapter 5 Introduction to Valuation: The Time Value of Money
Chapter 6 Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
Chapter 7 Interest Rates and Bond Valuation
Chapter 8 Stock Valuation
Chapter 9 Net Present Value and Other Investment Criteria
Table of Contents
Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
3. Chapter 1
Introduction to Corporate Finance
Chapter Outline
• 1.1 Corporate Finance and the Financial Manager
• 1.2 Corporate Firm/Forms of Business Organization
• 1.3 Corporate Securities as Contingent Claims on
Total Firm Value
• 1.4 The Goal of Financial Management
• 1.5 The Agency Problem and Control of the
Corporation
• 1.6 Financial Markets and the Corporation
3Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
4. Corporate finance is the study of financial
decision-making in business organizations.
1.1 What is Corporate Finance?
Corporate Finance is the activity of providing :
- money to corporations for investment, and
- the ways that corporations' use this money.
Corporate Finance branch of economics concerned
with how businesses raise and spend their money.
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5. Financial Management Decisions
• Capital
Budgeting
• Capital Structure
• Working Capital
Management
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6. Corporate Finance addresses the following three
questions:
1. What long-term investments should the firm engage
in?
2. How can the firm raise the money for the required
investments?
3. How much short-term cash flow does a company
need to pay its bills?
Financial Management Decisions
6Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
7. The Capital Budgeting Decision
1. What long-term investments should the firm engage
in?
Type and proportions of assets the firm need tend to
be set by the nature of the business.
Use the terms capital budgeting and capital
expenditure to making and managing expenditures on
long-lived assets.
7Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
8. The Capital Structure Decision
2. How can the firm raise the money for the required
investments?
The answer to this involves the capital structure,
which represents the proportions of :
the firm’s financing from current debt,
the firm’s financing from long-term debt, and
the firm’s financing from equity
8Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
9. The Net Working Capital Investment
Decision
3. How much short-term cash flow does a company
need to pay its bills?
The answer to this involves :
the firm’s net working capital,
the subject of short-term finance,
the firm’s short-term management cash flow, and
the timing of cash inflows and cash outflows.
9Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
11. The Financial Manager
A member of the top manager team (CFO)
responsible for:
Providing the timely and relevant data to support
planning and control activities.
Preparing financial statement for external users.
The treasurer is responsible for:
handing cash flows,
managing capital expenditures decisions, and
making financial plans.
11Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
12. The Financial Manager
To create value from the firm’s capital budgeting,
financing, and net working capital activities, the
financial manager should:
1.Try to make smart investment decisions (try to buy
assets that generate more cash than cost).
2.Try to make smart financing decisions (sell bonds or
stocks and other financing instruments that raise more
cash than cost).
12Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
13. The Firm and the Financial Markets
Cash flow
from firm (C)
Taxes(D)
Firm issues securities (A)
Retained
cash flows (F)
Dividends and
debt payments (E)
Financial
markets
Invests
in assets
(B)
Current assets
Fixed assets
Short-term debt
Long-term debt
Equity shares
13Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
14. 1.2 The Corporate Firm
• The corporate form of business is the standard
method for solving the problems encountered
in raising large amounts of cash.
• However, businesses can take other forms.
14Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
15. Forms of Business Organization
The Sole Proprietorship
The Partnership
General Partnership
Limited Partnership
The Corporation
Advantages and Disadvantages
Liquidity and Marketability of Ownership
Control
Liability
Continuity of Existence
Tax Considerations
15Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
16. A Comparison of Partnership
and Corporations
Corporation Partnership
Liquidity Shares can easily be
exchanged.
Subject to substantial
restrictions.
Voting Rights Usually each share gets
one vote
General Partner is in charge;
limited partners may have some
voting rights.
Taxation Double Partners pay taxes on
distributions.
Reinvestment and
dividend payout
Broad latitude All net cash flow is
distributed to partners.
Liability Limited liability General partners may have
unlimited liability. Limited
partners enjoy limited
liability.
Continuity Perpetual life Limited life
16Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
17. 1.3 Corporate Securities as Contingent
Claims on Total Firm Value
17Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
18. Bonds Compared to Stock
• Bondholders are
creditors
• Bonds a liability
• Interest is fixed
charge
• Interest is expense
• Interest tax
deductible
• No voting
• Stockholders are owners
• Stock is equity
• Dividends not fixed
charges
• Dividends not expense
• Dividends not tax
deductible
• Voting
18Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
19. Corporate Securities as Contingent Claims
on Total Firm Value
• The basic feature of a debt is that it is a promise by the
borrowing firm to repay a fixed dollar amount of by a
certain date.
• The shareholder’s claim on firm value is the residual
amount that remains after the debtholders are paid.
• If the value of the firm is less than the amount
promised to the debtholders, the shareholders get
nothing.
19Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
20. Debt and Equity as Contingent Claims
Payoff to
debt holders
Value of the firm (X)
Debt holders are promised $F.
If the value of the firm is less than $F, they get the
whatever the firm if worth.
If the value of the firm is
more than $F, debt holders
get a maximum of $F.
Payoff to
shareholders
Value of the firm (X)
If the value of the firm is
less than $F, share holders
get nothing.
If the value of the firm is
more than $F, share holders
get everything above $F.
Algebraically, the bondholder’s claim is:
Min[$F,$X]
Algebraically, the shareholder’s claim is:
Max[0,$X – $F]
20Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
$F
21. $F
Combined Payoffs to debt holders
and shareholders
Value of the firm (X)
Debt holders are promised
$F.
Payoff to debt
holders
Payoff to
shareholders
If the value of the firm is less
than $F, the shareholder’s claim
is: Max[0,$X – $F] = $0 and the
debt holder’s claim is Min[$F,$X]
= $X.
The sum of these is = $X
If the value of the firm is more
than $F, the shareholder’s claim
is: Max[0,$X – $F] = $X – $F and
the debt holder’s claim is:
Min[$F,$X] = $F.
The sum of these is = $X
Combined Payoffs to Debt and Equity
21Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
22. 1.4 Goals of the Corporate Firm
• The traditional answer is that the managers of
the corporation are obliged to make efforts to
maximize shareholder wealth.
22Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
23. Managerial Goals
• Managerial goals may be different from
shareholder goals
– Survival
– Independence
– Minimize costs and Maximize profits.
• Increased growth and size are not necessarily
the same thing as increased shareholder
wealth.
23Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
24. 1.5 The Agency Problem
• The agency relationship
• Will managers work in the shareholders’ best interests?
Agency costs
Direct agency Costs
Indirect agency Costs
• Control of the firm
• How do agency costs affect firm value (and shareholder
wealth)?
24Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
25. 1.6 Financial Markets
• Financial markets are composed of the money
markets and capital markets.
• Money Markets
– For debt securities that will pay off in the short
term.
– Usually less than one year.
• Capital Markets
– For long-term debt (equity securities).
– With maturity at over one yare.
– For equity shares.
25Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
26. Money Market Capital Markets
Non-government securities:
Debt securities:
-Certificate of Deposits (CDs)
-Commercial Paper (CP)
-Repurchase Agreements (Repo.)
-Banker’s acceptances (BAs)
Non-government securities:
- Corporate bond/ Bond
payable
Stock/Equity shares:
-Preferred stock
- Common stock
Financial Instruments
Government securities:
-Treasury notes (T-notes)
-Long-term Municipal Bonds
-Treasury bonds (T-bonds)
Government securities:
- Treasury bills (T-bills)
- Short term Municipal
bonds
26Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
27. Financial Markets
• The function of market in financial market are
divided two (transaction) markets:
• Primary Market
– When a corporation issues securities, cash flows
from investors to the firm.
– Usually an underwriter is involved
• Secondary Markets
– Involve the sale of “used” securities from one
investor to another.
– Securities may be exchange traded or trade over-
the-counter (OTC) in a dealer market.
27Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
29. 29
The Public Issue
• The Basic Procedure
– Management gets the approval of the Board of
Directors.
– The firm prepares and files a registration
statement with the SEC.
– The SEC studies the registration statement during
the waiting period.
– The firm prepares and files an amended
registration statement with the SEC.
Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
30. 30
Exchange Trading of Listed Stocks
• Auction markets are different from dealer
markets in two ways:
– Trading in a given auction exchange takes place at
a single site on the floor of the exchange.
– Transaction prices of shares are communicated
almost immediately to the public.
Instructed by YIN SOKHENG, Master in Finance
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