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Financial Analysis and Planning
Chapter 3 Financial Analysis and Planning
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Overview of Lecture The Annual Report Ratio Analysis
The Du Pont Identity Using Financial Statement Information Financial Planning Models External Financing and Growth
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Corporate Finance in the News
Insert a current news story here to frame the material you will cover in the lecture.
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Statement of Financial Position
The Annual Report Statement of Financial Position The Income Statement Statement of Cash Flows
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The Statement of Financial Position
Also known as The Balance Sheet Assets Liabilities + Shareholders’ equity Assets represent investments made by company Liabilities and Equity represent how investments are financed
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Figure 3.1 The Statement of Financial Position
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The Balance Sheet Equation
Liabilities Equity Assets
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Example 3.1 Building the Statement of Financial Position
From British Airways’ 2009 annual report, it had current assets of £2.346 billion, non-current assets of £8.142 billion, current liabilities of £4.142 billion, and non-current liabilities of £4.5 billion. What does British Airways’ statement of financial position or balance sheet look like? What is shareholders’ equity? What is net working capital?
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Example 3.1 Building the Statement of Financial Position
Net working capital is the difference between current assets and current liabilities, or £ £4.142 = -£1.796.
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Net Working Capital Net Working Capital = Current Assets minus Current Liabilities It is important to ensure that net working capital is positive Positive net working capital means that enough cash will be available to pay off liabilities arising
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Accounting Figures drawn from Accounting Standards Market Value
Market vs Book Value Book Value Accounting Figures drawn from Accounting Standards Market Value Value based on prices or market valuations
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Example 3.2 Market Value versus Book Value
Siouxsie plc has non-current assets with a book value of £700 and an appraised market value of about £1,000. Net working capital is £400 on the books, but approximately £600 would be realized if all the current accounts were liquidated. Siouxsie has £500 in long-term debt, both book value and market value. What is the book value of the equity? What is the market value?
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Example 3.2 Market Value versus Book Value
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Measures performance over a specific period
The Income Statement Measures performance over a specific period
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The Income Statement Revenues Expenses Income
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Three Important Considerations
The Income Statement Three Important Considerations Non-Cash Items Time Costs
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Average Tax Rates Marginal Tax Rate
Taxes Average Tax Rates This is the percentage of income that is paid in taxes Average Tax Rate is the tax bill divided by your taxable income Marginal Tax Rate The tax you would pay if you earn one more unit of currency
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Which Tax Rate Should You Use in Financial Decisions?
Use the Marginal Tax Rate since that is the rate that you would be taxed on any additional income earned
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Cash Flow The most important item to take from financial statements
Cash Flow is NOT the same as Net Working Capital Cash Flows from Assets = Cash Flows to Creditors and Equity Investors Total Cash Flow comes from operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities
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Work the Web Now is a good time to download a set of company accounts and look through them in detail.
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Financial Statement Analysis
It is important to be able to analyse a firm’s financial statements and compare them to other firms
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Financial Leverage Ratios
Ratio Analysis Liquidity Ratios Financial Leverage Ratios Turnover Ratios Profitability Ratios Market Value Ratios
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Liquidity or Short-Term Solvency Ratios
Current Ratio Quick or Acid Test Ratio Cash Ratio
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Short-Term Solvency Ratios
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Financial Leverage or Long-Term Solvency Ratios
Total Debt Ratio Debt to Equity Ratio Equity Multiplier Times Interest Earned Cash Coverage
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Long-Term Solvency Ratios
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Asset Management or Turnover Ratios
Inventory Turnover Days’ Sales in Inventory Receivables Turnover Days’ Sales in Receivables Total Asset Turnover
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Asset Management Ratios
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Profitability Ratios Profit Margin Return on Assets Return on Equity
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Profitability Ratios
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Earnings per Share Price Earnings Ratio Market to Book Ratio
Market Value Ratios Earnings per Share Price Earnings Ratio Market to Book Ratio
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Market Value Ratios
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ROE is Affected By Operating Efficiency Asset Use Efficiency
The Du Pont Identity ROE is Affected By Operating Efficiency Asset Use Efficiency Financial Leverage
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The Du Pont Identity: Proof
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Using Financial Statement Information: Choose a Benchmark
Look at the same ratio over a number of years Time Trend Analysis Compare ratio with similar firms Companies in same industry (Check SIC Code) Peer Group Analysis
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Financial Statement Analysis: Some Issues
Some companies operate in several industries Different Accounting Standards Inappropriate Peers You may want to compare your firm with the best in the industry Choose similar firms at the top of the industry Aspirant Analysis Financial Websites: Yahoo! Finance, Reuters, FT.Com, ADVFN.com, Motley Fool Company Accounts: Download from website Sources of Information
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Financial Statements can be used to plan over the long term
Financial Planning Financial Statements can be used to plan over the long term The Percentage of Sales approach to Financial Planning External Financing Needed (EFN)
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Example: Chute SA Income Statement Sales €1,000 Assets €500 Debt €250
Statement of Financial Position Sales €1,000 Assets €500 Debt €250 Costs 800 Equity 250 Net income € 200 Total Assume that all variables are a constant percentage of sales What happens if sales grow by 20 percent?
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Statement of Financial Position
Example: Chute SA Income Statement Sales €1,200 Costs 960 Net income € 240 Statement of Financial Position Assets €600 (+100) Debt €300 (+50) Equity 300 Total €600 (+100) How can net income be €240 but equity only increases by €50?
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The Percentage of Sales Approach
Assume only some variables are tied to sales growth
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Bogle plc Income Statement
Example: Bogle plc Bogle plc Income Statement Sales £1,000 Costs 800 Taxable income £ 200 Taxes(28%) 56 Net income £ 144 Dividends £48 Addition to retained earnings 96 Costs are a constant percentage of sales (i.e. Constant profit margin) Dividend payout ratio is constant What happens with a 25 percent increase in sales?
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Example: Bogle plc (25% increase in Sales)
Bogle plc Pro Forma Income Statement Sales (projected) £1,250 Costs (80% of sales) 1,000 Taxable income £ 250 Taxes (28%) 70 Net income £ 180 Dividend payout ratio = Cash dividends / Net income = £48/£144 = 1/3 Projected dividends paid to shareholders = £180 1/3 = £ 60 Projected addition to retained earnings = €180 2/3 = £180
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Example: Bogle plc Statement of Financial Position
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Example: Bogle plc New Statement of Financial Position
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External Financing Needed
For Bogle plc:
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Bogle plc Possible Scenario
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External Financing and Growth: Hoffman AG
Income Statement Sales €500 Costs 400 Taxable income €100 Taxes (34%) 34 Net income €66 Dividends €22 Addition to retained earnings 44
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External Financing and Growth: Hoffman AG
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Financing and Growth: Hoffman AG
You forecast sales of €600 next year. What will be the new debt-equity ratio? Sales (projected) €600.0 Costs (80% of sales) 480.0 Taxable income €120.0 Taxes (34%) 40.8 Net income € 79.2 Dividends €26.4 Addition to retained earnings 52.8
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Financing and Growth: Hoffman AG
Assume Hoffman borrows €47.2, New DE Ratio is £297.2/£302.8 = .98
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Growth and Projected EFN for Hoffman AG
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Growth and Financing Requirements for Hoffman AG
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Financial Policy and Growth
The Internal Growth Rate The Sustainable Growth Rate Determinants of Growth
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The Internal Growth Rate
For Paradise plc:
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The Sustainable Growth Rate
For Paradise plc:
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Determinants of Growth
Remember Du Pont! Profit Margin Total Asset Turnover Financial Policy Dividend Policy
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Financial Policy and Growth
If a firm does not wish to sell new equity and its profit margin, dividend policy, financial policy, and total asset turnover (or capital intensity) are all fixed, then there is only one possible growth rate.
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Financial Planning Models: Some Caveats
Financial Planning Models ignore cash flow, risk, and timing Financial Planning should not be a mechanical process Financial Planning Should be an Iterative Process
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Overview of Lecture The Annual Report Ratio Analysis
The Du Pont Identity Using Financial Statement Information Financial Planning Models External Financing and Growth
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Activities for this Lecture
Reading Insert here Assignment
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Thank You
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