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CHAPTER 16 Financing Current Assets

The document discusses different methods for financing current assets, including trade credit, commercial paper, and bank loans. It explains conservative, moderate, and aggressive working capital policies and compares the nominal and effective costs of various short-term financing options like trade credit, discount interest loans, and installment loans.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
421 views24 pages

CHAPTER 16 Financing Current Assets

The document discusses different methods for financing current assets, including trade credit, commercial paper, and bank loans. It explains conservative, moderate, and aggressive working capital policies and compares the nominal and effective costs of various short-term financing options like trade credit, discount interest loans, and installment loans.

Uploaded by

Ahsan
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 16

Financing Current Assets


 Working capital financing
policies
 A/P (trade credit)
 Commercial paper
 S-T bank loans
16-1
Working capital financing
policies
 Moderate – Match the maturity of
the assets with the maturity of the
financing.
 Aggressive – Use short-term
financing to finance permanent
assets.
 Conservative – Use permanent
capital for permanent assets and
temporary assets.
16-2
Moderate financing policy
$ Temp. C.A.
S-T
Loans

Perm C.A. L-T Fin:


Stock,
Bonds,
Fixed Assets Spon. C.L.

Years
Lower dashed line would be more aggressive.
16-3
Conservative financing
policy
Marketable
$ securities
Zero S-T
Debt

L-T Fin:
Perm C.A. Stock,
Bonds,
Spon. C.L.
Fixed Assets

Years
16-4
Short-term credit
 Any debt scheduled for repayment within
one year.
 Major sources of short-term credit
 Accounts payable (trade credit)
 Bank loans
 Commercial loans
 Accruals
 From the firm’s perspective, S-T credit is
more risky than L-T debt.
 Always a required payment around the
corner.
 May have trouble rolling over loans.
16-5
Advantages and disadvantages
of using short-term financing
 Advantages
 Speed
 Flexibility
 Lower cost than long-term debt
 Disadvantages
 Fluctuating interest expense
 Firm may be at risk of default as a result
of temporary economic conditions

16-6
Accrued liabilities
 Continually recurring short-term
liabilities, such as accrued wages or
taxes.
 Is there a cost to accrued liabilities?
 They are free in the sense that no
explicit interest is charged.
 However, firms have little control over
the level of accrued liabilities.

16-7
What is trade credit?
 Trade credit is credit furnished by a
firm’s suppliers.
 Trade credit is often the largest
source of short-term credit,
especially for small firms.
 Spontaneous, easy to get, but cost
can be high.

16-8
The cost of trade credit
 A firm buys $3,000,000 net ($3,030,303
gross) on terms of 1/10, net 30.
 The firm can forego discounts and pay
on Day 40, without penalty.

Net daily purchases = $3,000,000 /


365
= $8,219.18

16-9
Breaking down net and gross
expenditures
 Firm buys goods worth $3,000,000.
That’s the cash price.
 They must pay $30,303 more if they
don’t take discounts.
 Think of the extra $30,303 as a
financing cost similar to the interest
on a loan.
 Want to compare that cost with the
cost of a bank loan.

16-10
Breaking down trade
credit
 Payables level, if the firm takes discounts
 Payables = $8,219.18 (10) = $82,192
 Payables level, if the firm takes no discounts
 Payables = $8,219.18 (40) = $328,767
 Credit breakdown
Total trade credit $328,767
Free trade credit - 82,192
Costly trade credit $246,575

16-11
Nominal cost of costly trade
credit
 The firm loses 0.01($3,030,303)
= $30,303 of discounts to obtain
$246,575 in extra trade credit:

kNOM = $30,303 / $246,575


= 0.1229 = 12.29%
 The $30,303 is paid throughout the
year, so the effective cost of costly
trade credit is higher.
16-12
Nominal trade credit cost
formula
Discount% 365days
kNOM = ×
1 - Discount% Daystaken- Disc.period
1 365
= ×
99 40 - 10
= 0.1229
= 12.29%

16-13
Effective cost of trade
credit
 Periodic rate = 0.01 / 0.99 = 1.01%
 Periods/year = 365 / (40-10) =
12.1667
 Effective cost of trade credit
 EAR = (1 + periodic rate)n – 1
= (1.0101)12.1667 – 1 = 13.01%

16-14
Commercial paper (CP)
 Short-term notes issued by large,
strong companies. B&B couldn’t
issue CP--it’s too small.
 CP trades in the market at rates just
above T-bill rate.
 CP is bought with surplus cash by
banks and other companies, then
held as a marketable security for
liquidity purposes.

16-15
Bank loans
 The firm can borrow $100,000 for
1 year at an 8% nominal rate.
 Interest may be set under one of
the following scenarios:
 Simple annual interest
 Discount interest
 Discount interest with 10%
compensating balance
 Installment loan, add-on, 12 months
16-16
Must use the appropriate EARs
to evaluate the alternative loan
terms
 Nominal (quoted) rate = 8% in all cases.
 We want to compare loan cost rates and
choose lowest cost loan.
 We must make comparison on EAR =
Equivalent (or Effective) Annual Rate
basis.

16-17
Simple annual interest
 “Simple interest” means no discount or
add-on.

Interest = 0.08($100,000) = $8,000

kNOM = EAR = $8,000 / $100,000 = 8.0%

For a 1-year simple interest loan, kNOM =


EAR
16-18
Discount interest
 Deductible interest = 0.08 ($100,000)
= $8,000
 Usable funds = $100,000 - $8,000
= $92,000

INPUTS 1 92 0 -100
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT 8.6957

16-19
Raising necessary funds with
a discount interest loan
 Under the current scenario, $100,000 is borrowed
but $8,000 is forfeited because it is a discount
interest loan.
 Only $92,000 is available to the firm.
 If $100,000 of funds are required, then the amount
of the loan should be:
Amt borrowed = Amt needed / (1 – discount)
= $100,000 / 0.92 = $108,696

16-20
Discount interest loan with a
10% compensating balance
Amountneeded
Amountborrowed=
1 - discount- comp.balance
$100,000
= = $121,951
1 - 0.08- 0.1

 Interest = 0.08 ($121,951) = $9,756


 Effective cost = $9,756 / $100,000 =
9.756%

16-21
Add-on interest on a 12-
month installment loan
 Interest = 0.08 ($100,000) = $8,000
 Face amount = $100,000 + $8,000 = $108,000
 Monthly payment = $108,000/12 = $9,000
 Avg loan outstanding = $100,000/2 = $50,000
 Approximate cost = $8,000/$50,000 = 16.0%
 To find the appropriate effective rate, recognize that
the firm receives $100,000 and must make monthly
payments of $9,000. This constitutes an annuity.

16-22
Installment loan
From the calculator output below, we have:

kNOM = 12 (0.012043)
= 0.1445 = 14.45%

EAR = (1.012043)12 – 1 = 15.45%

INPUTS 12 100 -9 0
N I/YR PV PMT FV
OUTPUT 1.2043

16-23
What is a secured loan?
 In a secured loan, the borrower
pledges assets as collateral for the
loan.
 For short-term loans, the most
commonly pledged assets are
receivables and inventories.
 Securities are great collateral, but
generally not available.

16-24

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