CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Chapter 1 An Overview of Financial Management. 2 Topics in Chapter Basic Goal: to create shareholder value Agency relationships: Stockholders versus.
Advertisements

McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Corporate Finance.
Financial Management I
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Introduction To Corporate Finance Chapter One.
BBA, MBA (Finance & Banking), DU
 Forms of businesses  The basic goal: to create stock-holder value  Agency relationship: Stockholders versus managers CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial.
Key Concepts and Skills
Chapter 1: Outline Corporate Finance and the Financial Manager
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 9-1 Chapter (1) An Overview Of Financial Management.
1-1 Course Overview Finance: what is it? Corporations Investors Financial Markets: Banks, Stock Exchanges Corporate Finance Money and capital marketsInvestments.
1 - 0 Copyright © 2002 by Harcourt, Inc.All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management Role of financial management Career opportunities.
© 2005 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 9-1 Chapter (1) An Overview Of Financial Management.
Introduction to Financial Management
© 2005 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The standard view of CG (“The Shareholder Value Model”): Deals with the ways in which suppliers of finance to corporations assure themselves of getting.
1 1.Career Opportunities in Finance Money and capital markets Investments Financial management Some players have need for capital, others have excess capital.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
CHAPTER ONE Introduction To Corporate Finance. Key Concepts and Skills Know the basic types of financial management decisions and the role of the financial.
CHAPTER ONE Introduction To Corporate Finance. Key Concepts and Skills Know the basic types of financial management decisions and the role of the financial.
1 Chapter 1 An Overview of Financial Management. 2 Topics in Chapter Basic Goal: to create shareholder value Agency relationships: Stockholders versus.
SOURCES OF FUNDS: 1- retained earnings used from the company to the shareholders as dividends or for reinvestment 2- Borrowing, this tool has tax advantages.
Chapter 1 Introduction to Financial Management. Key Concepts and Skills Know the basic types of financial management decisions and the role of the financial.
Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 0 Chapter 1 Introduction to Financial Management.
Introduction to Corporate Finance. Corporate Finance and the Financial Manager.
1 Chapter 01 Introduction to Financial Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Introduction to Corporate Finance Chapter 1.
Hong Kong Polytechnic University AF3303 Business Finance Lecture 1 Introduction to Corporate Finance Instructor: Dr. Jacqueline Wang.
Ch 1. Introduction to Corporate Finance
Principles of Finance T ODAY’S S ESSION ‘Introduction to Finance’  Chapter One : An overview of managerial Finance.
Finance Concepts & Current Topics. Course Detail  Basic financial language  Conceptual skills  Emphasis is on applying concepts to current financial.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 1.0 Introduction to Financial Management Chapter 1.
Budi Purwanto Department of Management Bogor University of Agriculture.
1 - 0 Copyright © 2002 by Harcourt College Publishers.All rights reserved. Learning Goals: 1. Topics in Fin Goal of financial decisions 3. Agency.
Essentials of Managerial Finance by S. Besley & E. Brigham Slide 1 of 23 Chapter 1 An Overview of Managerial Finance.
CHAPTER 1 The Role and Environment of Managerial Finance
1 - 0 Copyright © 2002 South-Western The basic goal: to create stock- holder value Agency relationships: 1.Stockholders versus managers 2.Stockholders.
CHAPTER 1 An overview of Managerial Finance. What is Financial Management Is the ability to adapt to change, raise funds, invest in assets, and manage.
FNCE 3010 CHAPTER 13 Agency Conflicts & Corporate Governance 1 GJ Madigan F2014.
Chapter 1-1 Introduction to Financial Statements Financial Accounting, Fifth Edition.
1-1 CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management Career Opportunities Issues of the New Millennium Forms of Businesses Goals of the Corporation Agency.
An Overview of Financial and Multinational Financial Management.
Career Opportunities in Finance
CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management
Chapter 1 Introduction to Corporate Finance.
Key Concepts and Skills
Key Concepts and Skills
What to do 1. Make your 1st and 2nd slide an outline of your presentation 2. show one point at a time 3. Simplify and limit the number of words on each.
Financial Management Role of Financial Manager
REWARDING BUSINESS PERFORMANCE
Chapter 8 Lecture - Firms, the Stock Market, and Corporate Governance
An Overview of Financial Management
Chapter 1 Learning Objectives
CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management
An Overview of Financial Management
* * Financial Management Chapter Eighteen McGraw-Hill/Irwin
CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management
Chapter 1 Learning Objectives
Chapter 1 The Corporation
AN OVERVIEW OF MANAGERIAL FINANCE
Chapter 1 Principles of Finance
Financial Management and Institutions
CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management
CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management
CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management
Introduction to Corporate Finance
Chapter 1 Introduction to Financial Management
An Overview of Financial Management
Chapter 1 Introduction to Financial Management
CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Financial Management The basic goal: to create stock-holder value Agency relationships: 1. Stockholders versus managers 2. Stockholders versus creditors 1

What is an agency relationship? An agency relationship arises whenever one or more individuals, called principals, (1) hires another individual or organization, called an agent, to perform some service and (2) then delegates decision-making authority to that agent. 7

If you are the only employee, and only your money is invested in the business, would any agency problems exist? No agency problem would exist. A potential agency problem arises whenever the manager of a firm owns less than 100 percent of the firm’s common stock, or the firm borrows. You own 100 percent of the firm.

If you expanded and hired additional people to help you, might that give rise to agency problems? An agency relationship could exist between you and your employees if you, the principal, hired the employees to perform some service and delegated some decision-making authority to them.

If you needed additional capital to buy computer inventory or to develop software, might that lead to agency problems? Acquiring outside capital could lead to agency problems.

Would it matter if the new capital came in the form of an unsecured bank loan, a bank loan secured by your inventory of computers, or from new stockholders? Agency problems are less for secured than for unsecured debt, and different between stockholders and creditors.

There are 2 potential agency conflicts: Conflicts between stockholders and managers. Conflicts between stockholders and creditors.

Would potential agency problems increase or decrease if you expanded operations to other campuses? Increase. You could not physically be at all locations at the same time. Consequently, you would have to delegate decision-making authority to others.

If you were a bank lending officer looking at the situation, what actions might make a loan feasible? Creditors can protect themselves by (1) having the loan secured and (2) placing restrictive covenants in debt agreements. They can also charge a higher than normal interest rate to compensate for risk.

As the founder-owner-president of the company, what actions might mitigate your agency problems if you expanded beyond your home campus? 1. Structuring compensation packages to attract and retain able managers whose interests are aligned with yours. (More…)

2. Threat of firing. 3. Increase “monitoring” costs by making frequent visits to “off campus” locations.

Would going public in an IPO increase or decrease agency problems? By going public through an IPO, your firm would bring in new shareholders. This would increase agency problems, especially if you sell most of your stock and buy a yacht. You could minimize potential agency problems by staying on as CEO and running the company.

Why might you want to (1) inflate your reported earnings or (2) use off balance sheet financing to make your financial position look stronger? A manager might inflate a firm's reported earnings or make its debt appear to be lower if he or she wanted the firm to look good temporarily. For example just prior to exercising stock options or raising more debt. (More…)

What are the potential consequences of inflating earnings or hiding debt? If the firm is publicly traded, the stock price will probably drop once it is revealed that fraud has taken place. If private, banks may be unwilling to lend to it, and investors may be unwilling to invest more money.

What kind of compensation program might you use to minimize agency problems? “Reasonable” annual salary to meet living expenses Cash (or stock) bonus Options to buy stock or actual shares of stock to reward long-term performance Tie bonus/options to EVA

Is it easy for someone with technical skills and no understanding of financial management to move higher and higher in management? No. Investors are forcing managers to focus on value maximization. Successful firms (those who maximize shareholder value) will not continue to promote individuals who lack an understanding of financial management.

Why might someone interviewing for an entry level job have a better shot at getting a good job if he or she had a good grasp of financial management? Managers want to hire people who can make decisions with the broader goal of corporate value maximization in mind because investors are forcing top managers to focus on value maximization. (More…)

Students who understand this focus have a major advantage in the job market. This applies both to the initial job, and the career path that follows.