Financial Management: Financial Performance: Control and Measurement
Financial Management: Financial Performance: Control and Measurement
Financial Management: Financial Performance: Control and Measurement
6. Explain how the finance manager interacts with both internal and
external players.
7. Delineate the main types of business organizations and their
respective advantages and disadvantages.
8. Illustrate agency theory and the principal-agent problem.
9. Review issues in corporate governance and business ethics.
Definition of Finance:
• Finance is the art and science of managing
wealth.
– It is about making decisions regarding what assets
to buy/sell and when to buy/sell these assets.
– Its main objective is to make individuals and their
businesses better off.
Definition of financial management
1. Corporate Finance
2. Investments
3. Financial Institutions and Markets
4. International Finance.
Financial Markets
• Forums where buyers and sellers of financial assets and
commodities meet.
• Financial markets can be classified by:
– Type of asset traded
– Maturity of the financial asset
• money market
• capital market
– Nature of transaction
• dealer markets
• auction markets
The Finance Manager and Financial
Management
Finance manager
– Has to determine the best repayment structure for borrowed funds
– Makes sure that debt obligations are met on time
– Ensures that sufficient funds are available for carrying out daily
operations.
Financial Manager
• Financial managers try to answer some or all
of these questions
• The top financial manager within a firm is
usually the Chief Financial Officer (CFO)
– Treasurer – oversees cash management, credit
management, capital expenditures, and financial
planning
– Controller – oversees taxes, cost accounting,
financial accounting and data processing
The Finance Manager and Financial
Management (continued)
Financial management involves 3 main functions
• Capital Budgeting
• Capital Structure
• Working Capital Management
Financial Management Decisions
• Capital budgeting
– What long-term investments or projects should
the business take on?
• Capital structure
– How should we pay for our assets?
– Should we use debt or equity?
• Working capital management
– How do we manage the day-to-day finances of the
firm?
Objective of the Finance Manager
Corporation
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Corporation Investors
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Corporation Investors
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Corporation cash
Investors
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Secondary
markets
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Secondary
markets
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Secondary
markets
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Secondary
markets
Cash flow
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
Secondary
markets
Cash flow
tax
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
tax
Government
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
tax
Government
The Money Cycle
• Example: A mutual fund issues shares which are bought by
individuals
• The pooled funds are invested by the mutual fund company in
shares that are issued by firms
• The firms pay dividends periodically which are received by the
mutual fund and passed through to their shareholders, or
reinvested in additional shares and the cycle of money starts
again.
– The mutual fund managers earn fees;
– the firms whose securities are bought are able to raise capital for
growth and future returns; and
– the mutual fund shareholders earn dividends and capital gains.
• Thus, all participants are generally better off.
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Primary Market
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Primary Market
– Market in which new issues of a
security are sold to initial buyers.
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Primary Market
– Market in which new issues of a
security are sold to initial buyers.
• Secondary Market
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Primary Market
– Market in which new issues of a
security are sold to initial buyers.
• Secondary Market
– Market in which previously issued
securities are traded.
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Initial Public Offering (IPO)
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Initial Public Offering (IPO)
– The first time the firm’s stock is sold
to the general public.
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Initial Public Offering (IPO)
– The first time the firm’s stock is sold
to the general public.
• Seasoned New Issue
The Corporation and Financial
Markets
• Initial Public Offering (IPO)
– The first time the firm’s stock is sold
to the general public.
• Seasoned New Issue
– A new stock offering by a firm that
already has stock that is traded in
the secondary market.
The Agency Problem
• Agency relationship
– Principal hires an agent to represent his/her
interests
– Stockholders (principals) hire managers (agents)
to run the company
• Agency problem
– Conflict of interest between principal and agent
• Management goals and agency costs
A Basic Organizational Chart for a Company
The Legal Forms of Business
• There are three main legal categories of business
organizations:
1. Sole proprietorship
2. Partnership
3. Corporation
• Disadvantages
1. Owner pays personal tax rate on profits
2. Obligations of the business are sole responsibility of owner, and personal assets may be
necessary to pay obligations (personal and business assets are commingled).
3. Business entity limited to life of owner.
4. Can have limited access to outside funding for the business.
The Legal Forms of Business
(continued)
Partnership
• Advantages
1. Agreements between partners may be easily formed
2. Involves more individuals as owners and therefore usually more
expertise
3. Larger amount of capital usually available to the business (compared
to proprietorship)
• Disadvantages
1. Assets of general partners are commingled with assets of the
business
2. Profits treated as personal income for tax purposes
3. Difficult to transfer ownership
The Legal Forms of Business
(continued)
Corporation
• Advantages
1. Business is legal, separate entity from owners
2. Owners have limited liability to obligations of the business
3. Easy to transfer ownership
4. Usually greater access to capital for business
5. Owners do not have any personal liability for default
• Disadvantages
1. Most difficult business operation to form
2. Double taxation of company profits
3. Most regulated.
The Financial Management Setting:
The Agency Model
• Agency relationship
• Agency conflict
– Why does it arise?
– How can it be minimized?
• Principal-agent problem
• Agency theory
• Agency costs
Corporate Governance and Business
Ethics
• Corporate governance deals with….
– how a company conducts its business and implements controls to
ensure proper procedures and ethical behavior.