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Executive Summary

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American University of Beirut. 28-1. McGraw-Hill Ryerson 2003 McGraw Hill Ryerson Limited ... The difference between bank cash and book cash is called float. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Executive Summary


1
(No Transcript)
2
Executive Summary
  • Cash management is not as complex and
    conceptually challenging as other topics, such as
    capital budgeting and asset pricing.
  • Financial managers in many companies, especially
    in the retail and services industries, spend a
    significant portion of their time on cash
    management.
  • Most large Canadian corporations hold some of
    their assets in cash and marketable securities.

3
Chapter Outline
  • 28.1 Reasons for Holding Cash
  • 28.2 Determining the Target Cash Balance
  • 28.3 Managing the Collection and Disbursement of
    Cash
  • 28.4 Investing Idle Cash
  • 28.5 Summary Conclusions

4
28.1 Reasons for Holding Cash
  • Transactions motive
  • Transactions related needs come from normal
    disbursement and collection activities of the
    firm.
  • The disbursement of cash includes the payment of
    wages and salaries, trade debts, taxes, and
    dividends.
  • The cash inflows (collections) and outflows
    (disbursements) are not perfectly synchronized,
    and some level of cash holdings is necessary to
    serve as a buffer.
  • Perfect liquidity is the characteristic of cash
    that allows it to satisfy the transactions motive.

5
28.2 Determining the Target Cash Balance
  • The target cash balance involves a trade-off
    between the opportunity costs of holding too much
    cash (lost interest) and the trading costs of
    holding too little.
  • If a firm tries to keep its cash holdings too
    low, it will find itself selling marketable
    securities more frequently than if the cash
    balance were higher.
  • The trading costs will tend to fall as the cash
    balance becomes larger.
  • The opportunity costs of holding cash rise as the
    cash holdings rise.

6
28.2 Determining the Target Cash Balance
  • The Baumol Model
  • The Miller-Orr Model
  • Other Factors Influencing the Target Cash Balance

7
Costs of Holding Cash
Costs in dollars of holding cash
Trading costs increase when the firm must sell
securities to meet cash needs.
The investment income foregone when holding cash.
C
Size of cash balance
8
The Baumol Model
  • F The fixed cost of selling securities to raise
    cash
  • T The total amount of new cash needed
  • K The opportunity cost of holding cash this is
    the interest rate.

Time
1 2 3
9
The Baumol Model
  • F The fixed cost of selling securities to raise
    cash
  • T The total amount of new cash needed
  • K The opportunity cost of holding cash this is
    the interest rate.

As we transfer C each period we incur a trading
cost of F each period. If we need T in total over
the planning period we will pay F, T C times.
Time
1 2 3
10
The Baumol Model
C
Size of cash balance
The optimal cash balance is found where the
opportunity costs equal the trading costs
11
The Baumol Model
The optimal cash balance is found where the
opportunity costs equal the trading costs
Opportunity Costs Trading Costs
Multiply both sides by C
12
The Miller-Orr Model
  • The firm allows its cash balance to wander
    randomly between upper and lower control limits.


When the cash balance reaches the upper control
limit H cash is invested elsewhere to get us to
the target cash balance Z.
When the cash balance reaches the lower control
limit, L, investments are sold to raise cash to
get us up to the target cash balance.
Time
13
The Miller-Orr Model Math
  • Given L, which is set by the firm, the Miller-Orr
    model solves for Z and H
  • where s2 is the variance of net daily cash flows.
  • The average cash balance in the Miller-Orr model
    is

14
Implications of the Miller-Orr Model
  • To use the Miller-Orr model, the manager must do
    four things
  • Set the lower control limit for the cash balance.
  • Estimate the standard deviation of daily cash
    flows.
  • Determine the interest rate.
  • Estimate the trading costs of buying and selling
    securities.
  • The model clarifies the issues of cash
    management
  • The best return point, Z, is positively related
    to trading costs, F, and negatively related to
    the interest rate K.
  • Z and the average cash balance are positively
    related to the variability of cash flows.

15
Other Factors Influencing the Target Cash Balance
  • Borrowing
  • Borrowing is likely to be more expensive than
    selling marketable securities.
  • The need to borrow will depend on managements
    desire to hold low cash balances.
  • Relative costs
  • For large firms, the trading costs of buying and
    selling securities are very small when compared
    to the opportunity costs of holding cash.

16
28.3 Managing the Collection and Disbursement of
Cash
  • The difference between bank cash and book cash is
    called float.
  • Float management involves controlling the
    collection and disbursement of cash.
  • The objective in cash collection is to reduce the
    lag between the time customers pay their bills
    and the time the cheques are collected.
  • The objective in cash disbursement is to slow
    down payments, thereby increasing the time
    between when cheques are written and when cheques
    are presented.

17
Electronic Data Interchange
  • Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) is a general
    term that refers to the growing practice of
    direct, electronic information exchange between
    all types of businesses.
  • One important use of EDI is to electronically
    transfer financial information and funds between
    parties, to eliminate paper invoices, paper
    cheques, mailing, and handling.
  • One of the drawbacks of EDI is that it is
    expensive and complex to set up.

18
Accelerating Collections
19
Overview of Lockbox Processing
Local Bank Collects funds from PO Boxes
Envelopes opened separation of cheques and
receipts
Deposit of cheques into bank accounts
Details of receivables go to firm
Firm processes receivables
Bank clears cheques
20
Electronic Collection Systems
  • Focus on reducing float virtually to zero by
    replacing cheques with electronic funds transfer.
  • Examples used in Canada
  • Preauthorized payments
  • Point-of-sales transfers
  • Electronic trade payables
  • Smart cards.

21
Controlling Disbursements
  • Firms use zero-balance accounts to avoid carrying
    extra balances in each disbursement account.
  • With a zero-balance account, the firm, in
    cooperation with its bank, transfers in just
    enough funds to cover cheques presented that day.
  • The firm maintains two disbursement accounts one
    for suppliers and one for payroll.

22
Ethical and Legal Questions
  • The financial managers must always work with
    collected bank cash balances and not with the
    companys book balance, which reflects cheques
    that have been deposited but not collected.
  • If you are borrowing the banks money without
    their knowledge, you are raising serious ethical
    and legal questions.
  • The issue is minor in Canada since there can be a
    maximum of only one days deposit float.

23
28.4 Investing Idle Cash
  • A firm with surplus cash can park it in the
    money market.
  • Some large firms and many small ones use money
    market mutual funds.
  • Canadian chartered banks compete with money
    market funds offering arrangements in which the
    bank takes all excess available funds at the
    close of each business day and invests them for
    the firm.
  • Firms have surplus cash for three reasons
  • Seasonal or Cyclical Activities
  • Planned Expenditures
  • Different Types of Money Market Securities

24
Seasonal Cash Demands
Total Financing needs
Short-term financing
Long-term financing
Time
J F M A M
25
Characteristics of Short-term Securities
  • Maturity
  • Longer maturity securities are more exposed to
    interest rate risk than shorter maturity
    securities.
  • Default risk
  • DBRS compiles and publishes ratings of various
    corporate and public securities.
  • Marketability
  • No price-pressure effect
  • Time.
  • Taxability

26
Some Different Types of Money-Market Securities
  • Money-market securities are highly marketable and
    short-term.
  • They are issued by the federal government,
    domestic and foreign banks, and business
    corporations.
  • Examples are
  • T-bills
  • Commercial paper
  • Bankers acceptances
  • Dollar swaps

27
28.5 Summary Conclusions
  • A firm holds cash to conduct transactions and to
    compensate banks for the various services they
    render.
  • The optimal amount of cash for a firm to hold
    depends on the opportunity cost of holding cash
    and the uncertainty of future cash inflows and
    outflows.
  • Two transactions models that provide rough
    guidelines for determining the optimal cash
    position are
  • The Miller-Orr model
  • The Baumol model

28
28.5 Summary Conclusions
  • The firm can make use of a variety of procedures
    to manage the collection and disbursement of cash
    in such as way as to speed up the collection of
    cash and slow down payments.
  • Some methods to speed collections are
  • Lockboxes
  • Concentration banking
  • Wire transfers
  • The financial managers must always work with
    collected company cash balances and not with the
    companys book balance.

29
28.5 Summary Conclusions
  • If you are borrowing the banks money without
    their knowledge, you are raising serious ethical
    and legal questions.
  • The answers to which you probably know by now.
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