Title: Joseph Fabiilli | How Organizations Use Funds for Business?
1How Organizations Use Funds for Business?
Joseph Fabilli
2Learning Goals
- What roles do finance and the financial manager
play in the firms overall strategy? - How does a firm develop its financial plans,
including forecasts and budgets? - What types of short-term and long-term
expenditures does a firm make?
3Learning Goals (contd)
- What are the main sources and costs of unsecured
and secured short-term financing? - How do the two primary sources of long-term
financing compare? - What are the major types, features, and costs of
long-term debt? - When and how do firms issue equity, and what are
the costs?
4Learning Goals (contd)
- Where can investors buy and sell securities?
- What trends are affecting the field of financial
management?
5Learning Goal 1
- What roles do finance and the financial manager
play in the firms overall strategy?
6Financial Management
- the art and science of managing the firms money
so that it can meet its goals
7The Role of the Financial Manager
- To maximize the value of the firm to its
- owners by
- financial planning
- investment (spending money)
- financing (raising money)
8Learning Goal 2
- How does a firm develop its financial plans,
including forecasts and budgets?
9Financial Planning Requirements
- Forecasts
- short-term (operating plans)
- long-term (strategic plans)
- Budgets
- cash budget
- capital budget
- operating budget
10Learning Goal 3
- What types of short-term and long-term
expenditures does a firm make?
11How Organizations Use Funds
- Short-term expenses
- cash management
- accounts receivable
- inventory
- Long-term expenditures
- capital expenditures
- capital budgeting
12Learning Goal 4
- What are the main sources and costs of unsecured
and secured short-term financing?
13Unsecured Short-Term Financing
- Trade credits (accounts payable)
- Bank loans
- line of credit
- revolving credit agreement
- Commercial paper
14Secured Short-Term Financing
- Secured loans
- pledging specific assets as collateral
- Factoring
- selling accounts receivable outright at a discount
15Learning Goal 5
- How do the two primary sources of long-term
financing compare?
16Comparing Long-Term Financing
- Debt financing (borrowing)
- interest expense is tax deductible
- no loss of ownership
- requires payment of interest and principal on
specified dates - Equity financing (ownership)
- not required to pay dividends (not tax
deductible) or repay investment - common shareholders have voting rights
17Learning Goal 6
- What are the major types, features, and costs of
long-term debt?
18Long-Term Debt
- Term loans
- secured or unsecured
- 5- to 12-year maturity
- Corporate bonds
- 10- to 30-year maturity
- Mortgage loans
- secured by real estate
19Learning Goal 7
- When and how do firms issue equity, and what are
the costs?
20Equity Financing
- Common stock
- cost includes issuing costs and potential
dividend payments - Retained earnings
- profits reinvested in firm
- Preferred stock
- more expensive than debt
- dividends not tax-deductible
- claims are secondary to those of stockholders
- less expensive than common stock
21Debt vs. Equity Financing
Debt Equity
Voice in Management Creditors have none Stockholders vote
Claim on income assets Greater claim Residual claim
Maturity Stated maturity No maturity
Tax treatment Interest is deductible Dividends not deductible
22Learning Goal 8
- Where can investors buy and sell securities?
23Securities
- investment certificates issued by corporations
or governments that represent either equity or
debt
24Types of Markets
- Primary market
- new securities are sold (IPO)
- Secondary market
- organized stock exchanges
- Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX)
- TSX Venture Exchange
- foreign exchanges
- New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
- over-the-counter market
25Trends in Finance
- Finance goes global
- Risk management
- credit risk
- market risk
- operational risk
26Thank You