Study Guide (CH 1-2-3) FIRE 311
Study Guide (CH 1-2-3) FIRE 311
Study Guide (CH 1-2-3) FIRE 311
Chapter 1
1) Three main forms of business organization: Differences
Proprietorship
Advantages:
o Ease of formation
o Subject to few government regulations
o No corporate income taxes
Disadvantages:
o Unlimited personal liability
o Limited life
o Transferring ownership is difficult
o Difficult to raise capital
Partnership
Like proprietorship just with two or more members
Corporation
Advantages:
o Unlimited life
o Easy transfer or ownership
o Limited liability
o Ease of raising capital
Disadvantages:
o Cost of set up and report filing
o Double taxation
2) Advantages and disadvantages of each form of organization
Look above
3) Primary Goals of management and application.
Primary goal: Stockholder wealth maximization maximizing the stock price
Other goals: managerial incentives and social responsibility
4) Majority of business by numbers vs. business volume
5) Agency Problem: managers vs. owners
An agency relationship exists whenever a principal hires an agent to act on his or her
behalf.
An agency problem results when the agent makes decisions that are not in the best
interest of principals
6) Mechanism how to get managers to act in SHs best interest
o Managerial compensation (incentives)
o Shareholder intervention
o Threat of takeover
7) Management social responsibility
Chapter 2
1) Names and Functions of 4 main Financial Statements: Balance Sheet, Income Statement,
Stmt of Cash Flows and Stmt of Retained Earnings
Balance Sheet:
o Represents a picture taken on a specific date that shows a firms assets
(investments) and how those assets are financed (debt or equity)
Income Statement:
o Presents the results of business operations during a specified period of time
o Summarizes the revenues generated and the expenses incurred
Statement of Cash flows:
o Designed to show how the firms operations have affected its cash position
o Examines investment decisions (uses of cash)
o Examines financing decisions (sources of cash)
Statement of Retained Earnings:
o Changes in the common equity accounts between balance sheet dates
2) Liquidity ratios- is the firm able to meet its current obligations
Current ratio vs. Quick ratio
o Current ratio: current assets/ current liabilities
o Quick ratio: current assets-inventories/ current liabilities
3) Asset management ratios- is the firm effectively using its assets
Inventory Turnover Ratio
o COGS/inventory
Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)
Receivable s
Receivable s
DSO
360
o
1 Tax rate
charges payments
o
5) Profitability ratios- how do the combined effects of liquidity, asset and debt management
affect profits
Net Profit Margin
o Net Profit/Sales
Return on Total Assets (ROA)
o Net income/Total assets
Return on Common Equity (ROE)
o Net income/ common equity
6) Market ratios- what do investors think about the firms future financial prospects
Price/Earnings Ratio
o Price per share/ Earnings per share
Market/Book Ratio
o Market price per share/ Book value per share
7) Importance of TIE ratio for Creditors
TIE measures the extent to which a firms operating earnings- before interest and
taxes (EBIT) also called net operating income (NOI)- can decline before these
earnings are no longer sufficient to cover annual interest costs. Failure to meet this
obligation can bring legal action by the firms creditors, possibly resulting in
bankruptcy. Note that the EBIT, rather than net income, is used in the numerator
because interest is paid with pre-tax dollars.
8) Cash outflow vs. cash inflow