Title: The Scope Of Corporate Finance
1The Scope Of Corporate Finance
2Corporate Finance Functions
3The Dimensions of the Capital Acquisition Function
- Primary Market vs Secondary Market
- Capital Market vs Financial Intermediary
- Money Market vs Capital Market
- Public vs Private Capital Markets
- Going Public vs Privately Held
- Pay Dividends vs Retain Earnings
3
4Raising Capital Key Facts
- Internally-generated cash flow is the dominant
source of funding in all developed economies. - Typically 60-80 for US firms, 50-60 for others.
- The bulk of external funding is in the form of
debt. - Seasoned equity issues are only 4-8 of external
financing.
5Raising Capital Key Facts
- Profits reinvested (retained earnings) are the
same as a new equity issue each year. - This keeps the leverage ratio from rising too
high with time. - Banks everywhere are declining as a source of
capital for large firms. - Especially true in US less so in Europe, Japan
6Raising Capital Key Facts
- There has been a huge increase in total security
issuance volume since 1990.
7Growth in Global Security Issues1990-2002
Bn
Global debt equity
U.S. Issuers worldwide
8World Stock Market Capitalization, 1983-2002
9The Financial Management Function
Managing Daily Cash Inflows and Outflows
Forecasting Cash Balances
Building a Long-Term Financial Plan
Choosing the Right Mix of Debt and Equity
10The Risk Management Function
Managing the Firms Exposure to Significant Risks
Interest Rate Risk
Exchange Rate Risk
Commodity Price Risk
11The Corporate Governance Function
- The governance structure must ensure that
managers make decisions that are will maximize
shareholders wealth not just their own wealth.
12The Corporate Governance Function
- Incentives of managers, stockholders, and other
stakeholders often conflict - Shareholders face a collective action problem in
monitoring management - This is called the agency problem
13The Corporate Governance Function
- Historical experience and academic research
both suggest that ownership structure is very
important. - Concentrated vs atomistic ownership structure
- At least three forms of capitalism (US, Japan,
Europe) - The countrys history legal/regulatory system
is very important as well
14The Corporate Governance Function
- The role of takeovers in corporate governance
has grown dramatically in recent years - Has long been important in the US and UK
- Becoming increasingly important in Europe
15Value of Global M A1991-2002 (U.S. Billions)
16What Should Managers Maximize?
- Though plausible as a management objective,
profit maximization has problems - Does not account for the timing of returns
- Profits are not necessarily cash flows
- Most importantly it ignores risk
17What Should Managers Maximize?
- The best management objective Maximize
shareholder wealth by maximizing the VALUE of the
company, thereby maximizing stock price - Accounts for risk, timing, and cash flows
- As Residual Claimants, shareholders have better
incentives to maximize firm value than other
stakeholders - Shareholders can benefit only after other claims
are paid in full - Historical justification Success of financial
capitalism
18Agency Costs In Corporate Finance
- Agency costs are due to the separation of
ownership and control - Managers are the agents of the shareholders, but
are also human. The interests of managers and
shareholders inevitably diverge.
19Agency Costs In Corporate Finance
- Three ways to attempt to deal with agency costs
- Can rely on market forces Takeovers, proxy
contests, etc. - Can incur monitoring and bonding costs
- Can align manager and shareholder interests via
compensation contracts (stock options)
20Agency Costs In Corporate Finance
- Most controversial method Executive
compensation - The bull market led to huge payments
- Average total SP 500 CEO pay in 2001 9.7
Million - The bulk of this pay came from stock options
- Sometimes non-cash perks are used as well
Gulfstream for Steve Jobs
21Forms Of Business Organization In The U.S.
- No distinction between business and person (the
owner) - Easy to set up and operate Taxed as personal
income - Personal liability, limited life, difficult to
transfer
Proprietorship
Partnership
- Two or more business owners
- Partners - Liable for every other partners
actions
Limited Partnership
- One general and many limited partners
- Limited liability of corporation, tax benefits of
partnership - Real-estate, RD companies
22Forms Of Business Organization - Corporations
- Legal entity with all the economic rights and
responsibilities of a person - Incorporation occurs at state level Based on
state law - Strengths - Limited liability to investors,
unlimited business life
Corporation
Are there any weaknesses for corporations? YES!
Double taxation
23The Double Taxation of Dividends
Taxation of Business Income Corporations vs
Partnerships(Corporate Tax Rate (?c) 0.35
Personal Tax Rate (?p) 0.40)
24Less Double Taxation of Dividends
Taxation of Business Income Corporations vs
Partnerships(Corporate Tax Rate (?c) 0.35
Personal Tax Rate (?p) 0.15)
25The TraditionalAccounting Balance Sheet
26The TraditionalAccounting Balance Sheet
- The Balance Sheet
- Provides a snap-shot of the book value of the
firms major account categories at an arbitrary
point in time. - Is not intended to portray true values
- Leaves out some valuable assets and understates
or overstates the true value of others.
27The TraditionalAccounting Balance Sheet
- Whats missing on Microsofts 2002 balance sheet
that has real value to the company and its
investors? - http//www.microsoft.com/msft/ar.mspx
28The TraditionalAccounting Balance Sheet
- Check the book value of Microsofts Owners
Equity here and compute the actual market value
of equity based on its actual share price at
end-of-quarter dates that you can get here.
29The TraditionalAccounting Balance Sheet
Market Value and Book Value of Microsofts Equity
If the equity is that far off on the balance
sheet, what does it say about the rest of the
balance sheet information?
30The Market ValueBalance Sheet
31Valuation
- Valuation is the process of estimating the true
value of assets, securities, or entire companies. - Value is usually uncertain
- Value is based on future projections
- Value is affected by preferences
- Value changes constantly
32The Goal of the Firm
- The goal of the firm is to maximize its value.
- Maximize the value of the firm
- Maximize the wealth of its owners
- Maximize the price of its stock
- Maximize its contribution to the economy
33How Is Value Created?
- Do something for investors that they cant do
for themselves. - Exploit proprietary resources
- Raw materials, patents, information
- Create proprietary knowledge
- Expertise, experience, analysis
- Be a value-added link in a channel
- Wholesaler, distributor, retailer
- Provide a service
34The Investment Decision in a Nutshell
- Invest in projects that yield a return greater
than the minimum acceptable hurdle rate. - Invest in projects that have a rate of return
that exceeds the cost of the invested funds.
35The Hurdle Rate
- The hurdle rate is
- Based on the companys cost of capital
- Adjusted for the risk of the specific investment
- Greatly affected by economic conditions
- Influenced by competing investments
- Not directly observable (must be estimated)
- Constantly changing
36The Expected Rate of Return
- The Expected Rate of Return is
- The best guess of the average annual rate of
return to be generated by the project - Based on the expected cash flows generated by the
investment compared to its cost - Affected by the timing of the cash flows
37The Dividend Decision in a Nutshell
- If there are not enough investments that are
expected to earn the hurdle rate, return the cash
that cannot meet the investment test to the
stockholders by paying a dividend. - The form of return cash dividend or stock
repurchase - will depend on the stockholders
characteristics.
38The Financing Decision in a Nutshell
- Choose the financing mix that minimizes the
hurdle rate and matches the maturity of the
assets being financed. - The optimal capital structure is the one that
minimizes the cost of capital.
39Financing Trade-Offs
- The choice of using debt or equity to finance
the firm involves trade-offs between - Cost Debt costs less than equity
- Risk Debt increases the risk for shareholders
- Flexibility Debt limits decision-making
flexibility - Control Equity dilutes owners control
40Primary vs Secondary Markets
- Primary Market(s)
- Markets in which securities are sold the first
time, and from which the issuer receives the
proceeds. - Secondary Market(s)
- Markets in which securities are traded among
investors, and from which the issuer receives no
proceeds.
41Capital Market(s)
- The capital markets are where companies sell
original-issue securities (bonds, preferred
stock, common stock) to buyers, and therefore
where they raise most of their capital. - What is CAPITAL?
- What is the primary economic purpose
- of the capital market?
42Financial Intermediary
- Financial intermediaries help to raise capital
by transforming the form of the capital to fill
specific but differing demands of the capital
users and suppliers. - Retail Banks
- Commercial Banks
- Mortgage Banks
- Some functions of Investment Banks
- Real Estate Investment Trusts
- Some mutual funds
43Money Market vs Capital Market
- Money Market(s)
- Markets in which short-term securities
(maturities of one year or less) are bought and
sold. - Capital Market(s)
- Markets in which long-term securities
(maturities of more than one year) are bought and
sold.
44Public vs Private Capital Markets
- Public
- Securities are sold to the general public.
Anyone can participate. The issue is generally
managed by investment bankers. - Private
- The issue (usually debt or preferred stock) is
sold directly to the capital provider, such as a
pension fund or insurance company.
45Going Public vs Privately Held
- Going Public
- Common stock is sold to the general public, and
it is thereafter traded in the secondary market. - Privately Held
- Common stock is held by usually only a few
individuals, and any sales or purchases must be
negotiated with one of these people.
46Pay Dividends vs Retain Earnings
- Dividends
- Dividends are paid from retained earnings.
Consequently, paying dividends amounts to
un-financing the company. Dividends should only
be paid when there are no value-creating
opportunities for the company to use the money
internally. - Retained Earnings
- Retained earnings belong to the common
shareholders and should be retained only if they
can be invested in value-creating initiatives.
Otherwise, they should be paid out as dividends.
47The Scope Of Corporate Finance