Title: LongTerm Financial Planning, Financial Forecasting, and Growth
1- Long-Term Financial Planning, Financial
Forecasting, and Growth
2Business Planning
- Through the process of business planning,
management sets goals and objectives that seek to
position the company relative to the economic,
competitive, technological, and political
environment. Business plans are structured around
goals and objectives specified by management. - It formulates strategies and tactics to achieve
these goals and objectives. - These strategies and tactics result in specific
plans for operational performance and
investments.
3Business Planning (Continued)
- Planning provides a company with a roadmap to the
future it makes explicit where the company
wants to go and how it intends to get there - It provides a vehicle for developing strategy in
pursuit of value creation - Value creating strategies are commonly stated in
terms of growth targets. - Growth targets should not be ends in themselves,
but the outcome of value-creating investment,
operating, and financing policies.
4Financial Planning
- Financial planning is a aspect of more general
business planning. - Financial planning deals with the financial
consequences of operating decisions and with
investment and financial activities.
5Functions of Financial Planning (Continued)
- Planning provides an integrative, systematic view
of company activities. - Identifies interactions among activities and
decisions e.g., interaction between credit and
inventory policy and financing needs - Makes explicit linkages
- among key functional areas of the firm, and
- among different areas or aspects of a firm's
business - It provides a vehicle for exploring options.
- Can clarify the implications of alternative
policy choices, given assumptions about the
economic, political, regulatory, and other
relevant environments - Can highlight the impact of alternative
investment and financing options
6Functions of Financial Planning (Concluded)
- Provides a vehicle for anticipating potential
problems and avoiding unpleasant surprises - Helps management identify possible outcomes and
to plan accordingly - Can prevent unpleasant surprises by looking at
worst case scenarios - Allows for the development of contingency plans
- Ensuring Feasibility and Internal Consistency
- Helps management determine if goals are feasible
(can be accomplished) and if the various goals of
the firm are consistent with one another
7Basic Policy Considerations That Shape Financial
Planning
- The firms growth policy What are the firms
growth objectives, and how does it intend to
achieve them? - How aggressively to pursue growth?
- What operating strategies and investment policies
will it employ to achieve the growth objectives? - How to grow e.g., through acquisitions or
through internal growth? - The firms working capital policy How much does
it invest in the different components of working
capital to support the firms sales targets and
to provide liquidity. - Includes credit and inventory policies Its
policies regarding the terms of credit it offers
to customers, (which determines its investment in
accounts receivable), and regarding how much
inventory to hold
8Basic Policy Considerations that Shape Financial
Planning (Continued)
- The firms fixed asset investment policy
Decisions regarding investments in additional
fixed assets (how much and what kinds) to support
growth and other strategic opportunities.
Determined by capital budgeting decisions. - The firms capital structure policy its policy
regarding financial leverage, i.e., the
proportion of debt, and the types of debt, to use
to finance its investments.
9Basic Policy Considerations that Shape Financial
Planning (Concluded)
- The firms dividend policy determines the
proportion of after-tax cash flow to be paid to
shareholders versus the proportion of cash flow
reinvested in the firm. - The firms payment policy toward its suppliers
and others Its policy regarding the use of
trade credit (financing through accounts
payable).
10Basic Elements of Financial Planning Models
- Inputs and assumptions
- The planning model
- Model outputs
11Elements of Financial Planning Models (Continued)
- Inputs and Assumptions
- Sales forecasts (generally, the key driver of the
model) - Assumptions about the relationships between
individual financial statement items and sales
in particular, assumptions about how each
financial statement item will change as sales
change? - Assumptions about the future economic environment
in which the firm is expected to operate.
Includes assumptions about the future state of
the economy, interest rates, inflation, product
demand (hence sales growth), character and degree
of competition, and other aspects of the future
economic environment.
12Elements of Financial Planning Models (Continued)
- The planning model
- Consists of equations that relate sales, assets,
and financial requirements and that generate
outputs from model inputs - Key Outputs of the Forecasting Model
- Pro forma statements
- Financial statement projections are important
outputs - Provides data for calculating projected financial
ratios and other measures
13Elements of Financial Planning Models (Concluded)
- The plug
- The amount of external financing, or excess cash,
that makes the balance sheet balance - An estimate of financial requirements
- Management decisions determine what types of
financing will be obtained or how excess cash
will be used. - Sources of external funds are influenced by the
firms debt and and dividend policies and by the
costs of alternative sources of financing,
whereas uses of excess cash are influenced by the
firms working capital and long-term investment
policies
14The Percentage of Sales Approach General Formulas
- Given a sales forecast and an estimated profit
margin, what addition to retained earnings can be
expected? - Let
- S previous (last) periods sales
- g projected change (increase/decrease) in
sales - PM profit margin
- b earnings retention (plowback) ratio
- The expected addition to retained earnings is
- S(1 g) x PM x b.
- The expected addition to retained earnings
represents the level of internal financing the
firm is expected to generate over the coming
period.
15The Percentage of Sales Approach General
Formulas (continued)
- What level of asset investment is needed to
support a given level of sales growth? For
simplicity, assume that the firm is operating at
full capacity with respect to a given asset, and
that investment in this asset changes
proportionately with sales. Then, the indicated
change (increase or decrease) in the asset
required is given by - Ai x g
- where,
- Ai ending asset balance from the previous
period, and - g projected change in sales.
16The Percentage of Sales Approach General
Formulas (concluded)
- If the required increase in total assets exceeds
the spontaneous financing and the amount of
internally generated funding (the addition to
retained earnings) available, i.e., ?A (SL
?RE), then the difference is an estimate of the - External Financing Needed (EFN).
- Otherwise, the difference is an estimate of the
- Excess Cash Available.
- Spontaneous financing ? defined as liabilities
that require no explicit financing decision,
i.e., assets that increase spontaneously with
sales. The most important of these are payables.
17EFN Equation
- The EFN equation says that the amount of
additional external financing needed is the
investment in additional assets that must be
funded less the funds raised spontaneously
(largely through increases in accounts payable,
but also through increases in accruals) and
internally generated funds (additions to retained
earnings). - EFN Addition to Assets Increase in
spontaneous liabilities Addition to retained
earnings - This equation provides a quick way to assess plan
outcomes. - For quick but rough forecasting it is often
assumed that all assets increase proportionately
with sales, in which case ?TA TA x g. - Realistically, however, not all assets can be
expected to increase proportionately with sales.
An accurate estimate of the amount of these
assets needed to support the growth in sales must
be estimated in a different way, such as with
T-account forecasting.
18EFN Equation (Concluded)
- The formulation of the simple EFN forecasting
equation is - EFN (A/S0)(?S) (SL/S0)(?S) (PM)(S1)(1 d).
- Expressing all sales in term of current (most
recent) sales, the EFN equation becomes, - EFN (A/S)(g)(S) (SL/S)(g)(S)
(PM)(S)(1g)(1 d). - This simplifies to,
- EFN (A)(g) (SL)(g) (PM)(S)(1g)(1 d).
- Where,
- A total assets thus this simple
forecasting model assumes that ?A TA
x g. - SL spontaneous liabilities, defined as
liabilities that increase
spontaneously with sales, i.e., liabilities
requiring no explicit financing decision
(the most important of which are
payables)
19Financial Forecasting Relationship between
different accounts and sales
- The EFN equation is a quick way to approximate
the amount of external financing needed.
However, it is only an approximation. - A more accurate estimate can be obtained by
adjusting each item on the financial statements
according to how they are expected to change with
growth in sales. - HYBRID FORECASTING METHODS The percentage of
sales forecasting method can be used for those
assets presumed to change proportionately with
sales, while other methods can be used to
determine the required changes in assets that do
not.
20Relationship between different accounts and sales
(Continued)
- Illustrate the financial statement forecasting
method where different accounts have different
relationships with sales.
21Forecasting External Funds Needed
- Income Statement
- _____2003
Forecast_____ - 2002 Forecast First
Second Actual Basis
Pass Feedback Pass - Sales 2,000.00 x 1.25
2,500.00 2,500.00 - Less Variable costs (1,200.00) x 1.25
(1,500.00) (1,500.00) - Fixed costs (700.00) x
1.10 (770.00)
(770.00) - EBIT 100.00
230.00
230.00 - Interest (16.00)
(16.00) 11.20
(27.20) - EBT 84.00
214.00
202.80 - Taxes (40) (33.60)
(85.60)
(81.80) - Net income 50.40
128.40
121.68 - Dividends 15.12 (30)
38.52
36.50 - RE Addition 35.28
89.88 -4.70 85.18 - External funds 50 Notes Payable and 50
Long-Term Debt. - ?Interest Expense 0.06 (80.06) 0.08
(80.06) 4.80
6.40 11.20.
22- Balance Sheet
- _____2003
Forecast_____ - 2002 Forecast First
Second Actual Basis Pass
Feedback Pass - Cash and securities 20 x
1.25 25.00 25.00 - Accounts Receivable 240 x 1.25
300.00 300.00 - Inventories 240
x 1.25 300.00
300.00 - Total current assets 500
625.00 625.00 - Net fixed assets 600 x
1.25 750.00
750.00 - Total assets 1,100
1,375.00
1,375.00 - Accounts payable/accruals 100 x 1.25
125.00 125.00 - Notes payable 100 100.00
80.06 180.06 - Total current liabilities 200
225.00 305.06 - Long-term debt 200
200.00 80.06 280.06 - Common stock 500 500.00 500.00
- Retained earnings 200 89.88 289.88
-4.70 285.18 - Total liabilities equity 1,100 1,214.88 1
,370.30 - AFN 160.12 4.70
- ? in Notes Payable 160.12 x 0.5 80.06.
- ? in Long-Term Debt 204.22 x 0.5 80.06.
23Excess Capacity in Fixed Assets
- So far, 100 capacity has been assumed. Suppose,
instead, that current capacity use is less than
full capacity. - Actual sales Capacity Used x Full Capacity
Sales - Rearranging gives the equation for full capacity
sales, - Full Capacity Sales Actual Sales / Capacity
Used -
24Excess Capacity in Fixed Assets (Continued)
- The firms target amount of fixed assets to
support sales can be estimated by its Fixed
Asset-to-Sales Ratio (FA-to-Sales Ratio) - FA-to-Sales Ratio (FA / S) Current Fixed
Assets / Full Capacity Sales - This ratio is used to forecast any needed
additions to fixed assets.
25Excess Capacity in Fixed Assets (continued)
- Amount of Fixed Assets (FA) Needed
- If projected sales gt Full capacity sales,
then - Projected FA FA-to-sales ratio x
projected sales, - If projected sales lt full capacity sales,
then - Projected FA current level of fixed
assets -
-
26Excess Capacity in Fixed Assets (concluded)
- Addition to Fixed Assets (FA)
- If projected sales gt full capacity sales,
then - Addition to FA FA-to-Sales Ratio x
(Projected Sales Full Cap. Sales) - If projected sales lt full capacity sales,
then - Addition to FA 0
27The Percentage of Sales Approach What About
Capacity Utilization?
- 1. Suppose a 30 increase in the 2,000
current sales is expected. - 2. At 2,000 current sales and 80 capacity,
full capacity sales will be - 2000 .80 x full capacity sales
- Full capacity sales 2000/.80 2500
- 3. At full capacity, fixed assets to sales will
be - FA-to-Sales Ratio Current FA / Full Capacity
Sales - 600/2500 24.00
- 4. So, at projected sales, NFA will need to be
- NFA 24.00 x 2600 624.00
- At full capacity, the NFA would be 780 (600 x
1.30) - Thus the level of NFA is 780 - 624.00 156.00
less than projected assuming full capacity. - 5. In this case, this means that the estimate
of EFN is 156.00 less than it would be
assuming full capacity. - So, the impact of different capacity assumptions
is critical to asset, hence financing,
projections.
28Growth and Available Financing
- Key issues regarding financing and sales growth
- So far we have examined the relationship between
sales growth and financing requirements. We have
addressed the issue What is the relationship
between sales growth and the amount of external
financing needed? In this case, sales growth
determines the amount of financing needed. - Now we are going to examine the following issue
What growth rate in sales is possible when the
amount of financing available is constrained? In
this case, sales growth determined the amount of
financing. - We will examine this question through two
financing-determined growth rates the internal
growth rate and the sustainable growth rate.
29Growth and Available Financing (Continued)
- Recent Financial Statements
- Income statement Balance sheet
- Sales 100 Total Assets 50
- Less Costs 90 Debt 20
Equity 30 - Net Income 10 Total 50
- Note D/E 2/3 and D/A 40
30Internal Growth Rate Formula (IGR)
- The IGR is the maximum growth rate that can be
achieved with no external financing (debt or
equity). If no external financing is to be used,
then the sole sources of financing for additional
investment are increases in spontaneous
liabilities and addition to retained earnings
(internally generated funding). The internal
growth rate (IGR) is the growth rate that can be
funded from these sources.
31Internal growth rate (IGR) (Continued)
- Assume that
- 1. All costs and assets grow at the same rate
as sales - 2. 60 of net income is paid out in dividends
- 3. No external financing is available (debt
or equity) - Q. What is the maximum growth rate achievable?
- A. The maximum growth rate is given by
- ROA x b
- Internal growth rate (IGR)
- 1 - (ROA x b)
- where ROA return on assets (Net income/assets)
- b earnings retention or plowback ratio
- ROA 10/50 20
- b 1 - .60 .40
- IGR (20 x .40)/1 - (20 x .40)
- .08/.92 .08695656 ? 8.7
32Growth and Financing Needed for a Company with a
10 IGR
33The Internal Growth Rate (continued)
- Assume sales do grow at 8.7 percent. How are the
financial statements affected? - Pro Forma Financial Statements
- Income Statement Balance Sheet
- Sales 108.70 Assets 54.35 Debt
20.00 - - Costs 97.83 Equity 34.35
- Net Inc 10.87 Total 54.35 Total
54.35 - Dividends 6.52
- Add to R/E 4.35
34The Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR)
- The sustainable growth rate (SGR) is the maximum
growth rate that can be achieved with no external
equity financing while maintaining a constant
debt/equity ratio. - If the firm elects to issue no additional
external equity but chooses to use additional
debt in amounts that preserves its existing
capital structure (D/E ratio), then the amount of
available new financing is the sum of the
increase in spontaneous liabilities, the addition
to retained earnings, and the additional debt
financing proportional to the addition to
retained earnings (?D D/E x ?RE).
35Sustainable Growth Rate (continued)
- Assume
- 1. no external equity financing is available
- 2. the current debt/equity ratio is optimal
- Q. What is the maximum growth rate achievable
now? - A. The maximum growth rate is given by
- ROE
x b - Sustainable growth rate (SGR)
- 1 - (ROE x b)
- ROE 10/30 1/3( 33.333)
- b 1.00 - .60 .40
- SGR (1/3 x .40)/1 - (1/3 x .40)
- .1538462 ? 15.385
36The Sustainable Growth Rate (Continued)
- Assume sales do grow at 15.385 percent
- Pro Forma Financial Statements
- Income statement Balance sheet
- Sales 115.38 Assets 57.69 Debt 20.00
- Costs 103.85 Equity 34.61
- Net 11.53 Total 57.69 Total 54.61
- Dividends 6.92 EFN 3.08
- Add to R/E 4.61
- If we borrow the 3.08, the debt/equity ratio
will be - 23.08/34.61 2/3
37Summary of Internal and Sustainable Growth Rates
- ROA x b
- Internal growth rate (IGR)
- 1 - (ROA x b)
- Recall from the DuPont identity, ROA is a
product of two measures of operating performance,
the profit margin (PM) and total asset turnover
(TAT). The IGR is thus a function of the firms
operating performance and its dividend policy
(retention rate). - ROE x
b - Sustainable growth rate (SGR)
- 1 - (ROE x b)
- Recall from the DuPont identity that ROE is a
product of ROA and the equity multiplier (EM),
which reflects the firms capital structure
policy. Thus the SGR is a function of the
companys financing policies (its capital
structure and dividend policies) and its
operating performance.
38The Sustainable Growth Rate (concluded)
- The rate of sustainable growth depends on four
factors - 1. Profitability (profit margin)
- 2. Dividend Policy (dividend payout)
- 3. Financial policy (debt-equity ratio)
- 4. Asset utilization (total asset turnover)
- This can be seen by examining the DuPont
Equation. - Two of the above four factors reflect financing
policies and two reflect operating performance.
Can you name them?
39The Du Pont Identity
- 1. Return on equity (ROE) can be decomposed as
follows - ROE Net income/Total equity Net
income/Total equity x Total assets/Total assets
Net income/Total assets x Total assets/Total
equity ROA x Equity multiplier - 2. Return on assets (ROA) can be decomposed as
follows - ROA Net income/Total assets x
Sales/Sales Net income/Sales x Sales/Total
assets Profit margin x Total asset turnover
40The Du Pont Identity (Continued)
- 3. Putting it all together gives the Du Pont
identity - ROE ROA x Equity multiplier Profit
margin x Total asset turnover x Equity
multiplier - 4. Profitability (or the lack thereof!) is
examined through three dimensions - Operating efficiency (measured by profit margin)
- Asset use efficiency (measured by total asset
turnover) - Financial leverage (measured by equity multiplier)
41Questions the Financial Planner Should Use to
Assess the Forecasting Model
- Mark Twain once said forecasting is very
difficult, particularly if it concerns the
future. The process of financial planning
involves the use of mathematical models, which
can provide the illusion of great accuracy. - In assessing a financial forecast, the planner
should ask the following questions - Are the results generated by the model
reasonable? - Have I considered all possible outcomes?
- How reasonable were the economic assumptions that
were used to generate the forecast? - Which economic and other environmental
assumptions have the greatest impact on the
outcome? - Which variables in the model are of the greatest
importance in determining the outcome (e.g.,
EFN)? - Have I forgotten anything important?
42Concluding Comments Concerning Financial Planning
- It is important to note that these simple
planning models use accounting numbers.
Consequently, we must think in terms of the
following question - How does the plan affect the amount, timing, and
risk of firm cash flows? - The following questions should also be asked as
we go through the planning process - Does the plan highlight key tradeoffs for further
examination? - Does the plan point out inconsistencies in our
goals (for example, the goals of maximizing sales
volume and gross margins are inconsistent)? - If we follow this plan, will we maximize firm
value, and thus owners wealth?