1 / 66

Corporate Finance A1

Corporate Finance A1. Vysoká škola finanční a správní Summ er Semester 201 2 Jaromír R. Stemberg jaromir@mail.vsfs.cz. Course Layout. T welve two-hour lessons The course is to i ntroduce general financial management problems , realtions , terminology, and solutions

thai
Télécharger la présentation

Corporate Finance A1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Corporate Finance A1 Vysokáškolafinanční a správní Summer Semester 2012 Jaromír R. Stemberg jaromir@mail.vsfs.cz

  2. Course Layout • Twelve two-hour lessons • The course is to introducegeneralfinancial management problems, realtions, terminology, and solutions • Endswith a Credit (zápočet)

  3. Literature • Block, Stanley: FoundationsofFinancial ManagementMcGraw-Hill, 2009ISBN 978-0-07-128525-4

  4. Grading • End ofSummersemester: Pass / Fail • 30%: Three assignments (10% each) • 18%: Seminarsattendance (3% each) • 52%: Written test • Minimum to pass: 70% • Students in full time study program should attend 75% of seminars as a minimum

  5. History of Money and Accounting

  6. Barter Trade • Exchange of personal possessions of value for other goods • From 9,000-6,000 B.C., livestock was often used as a unit of exchange; as agriculture developed, people used crops for barter • This kind of exchange started at the beginning of humankind and is still used today

  7. Barter Trade Problems • Finding the other party: - interest - time • Establishing equal value of exchanged goods • Durability of the exchanged goods, potentiality to store it • Need for a common, durable, storable, non-decaying, generally accepted unit of exchange

  8. Cowry Shells • The first money (or medium of exchange) • Began to be used at about 1200 B.C. in China • Accepted in some African regions till 1950s

  9. Metal Coins • China, 1000 BC: Bronze and copper cowry imitations were considered the earliest forms of metal coins. They contained holes so they could be put together like a chain. • Lydia (Turkey), 500 BC:The first coins developed out of lumps of silver and were stamped with emperors to mark their authenticity. The techniques were quickly copied by the Greeks, Persians, and the Roman Empire. Unlike Chinese coins, these were made from precious metals such as silver and gold, which had more inherent value.

  10. Banknotes • China, 100 BC:Leather money – pieces of painted white deerskin. • China, 800 AD:The first paper banknotes appeared. • China, 1450 AD:Printing money led to a soaring inflation so the use of paper money in China disappeared (this was still years to come before paper currency would be used in Europe).

  11. Development of Accounting • Babylon, 18th century B.C.- first organized records kept to account for assets and loans- other ancient civilizations (Roman Empire, Greek Cities, Egypt) followed • Europe, 1st millennium A.D.fall of the Roman Empire caused serious setback in education • Italy, 13th century A.D. - growing trade in the Mediterranean and accumulation of wealth in Italy gave grounds to the development of banking- double-entry bookkeeping was invented by Luca Pacioli

  12. Modern Times Accounting • 17th century France: - obligation to present bi-yearly balances of financial situation Italy:- complete theory of accounting Holland:- first corporation established, need for equity accounting • 19th century- massive increase of accounting operations- perfection of accounting principles- rules for asset evaluation

  13. History of Accounting Standards • 1938: American Institute of Certified Public Accountants began to develop accounting standards (request of the Securities and Exchange Commission) • 1959: Accounting Principles Board established, introduction of GAAP • 1973:the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) formed to develop International Accounting Standards (IAS) • 2001:end of IAS (41 issued so far, stillvalid); new standards are fromnow on called International FinancialReporting Standards (IFRS)thatquicklybecameacceptedworldwide

  14. Principles of Accounting

  15. Record Keeping • Information – a basic element needed for - past references and reporting- present registration and evidence - future planning and management decision making • Registered entries keep track of: - amount how much- count how many- time when- place where- person who

  16. Double-Entry Accounting • Accounts- recognition of individual transactions- debit and credit to be recorded at the same time • General Ledger (hlavníkniha)- transactions recorded in accounts, total of both sides must be equal- can be extended by subsidiary ledgers • Journal (účetnídeník)- transactions recorded in order as they occurred- both sides of the record must be equal

  17. Purpose of Record Keeping • Financial accounting- provides information for owners, investors and other stake holders- serves as a base for income tax due calculation- subject to regulations by accounting standards- must be true and honest • Managerial accounting- serves the managers as base for strategy planning and decision making- provides specified pieces of information - outcomes don’t have to be understood by the general public

  18. Financial ReportsAnalysis

  19. Balance Sheet AssetsLiabilities Current Assets Current Liabilities Cash and Equivalents Short-Term Accounts Payable Short-Term ReceivablesCurrent Tax Payable Inventory Short-Term Loans and Borrowings Accruals and Other S/T Assets Accruals and Other S/T Liabilities Long-Term AssetsLong-Term Liabilities Intangible Fixed Assets Long-Term Payables • Tangible Fixed AssetsProvisions • Long-Term Receivables • Owners’ Equity Share Capital Share Premium and Capital Funds Retained Earnings Y-T-D Profit (Loss)

  20. Cash FlowStatement

  21. StatementofChanges in Equity

  22. Profitability Ratios • Profit margin • Return on assets (investments) • Return on equity

  23. Profit Margin Net income / Sales = 200 / 4 000 = 5%

  24. Return on Assets Net income / Totalassets = 200 / 1 600 = 12,5%

  25. Return on Equity Net income / Stockholders‘ equity = 200 / 1 000 = 20%

  26. AssetUtilizationRatios • Receivableturnover • Averagecollection period • Inventoryturnover • Fixedassetturnover • Totalassetturnover

  27. ReceivableTurnover Sales / Accountsreceivable = 4 000 / 350 = 11,4 times

  28. AverageCollection Period Accountsreceivable / (Sales / 365) = 350 / 11 = 32 days

  29. FixedAssetsTurnover Sales / FixedAssets = 4 000 / 800 = 5 times

  30. TotalAssetsTurnover Sales / Totalassets = 4 000 / 1 600 = 2,5 times

  31. Inventury Turnover Sales / FixedAssets = 4 000 / 800 = 5 times

  32. LiquidityRatios • Current ratio • Quick ratio

  33. Current Ratio Currentassets / Currentliabilities = 800 / 300 = 2,67

  34. Quick Ratio (Currentassets - Inventory) / Currentliabilities = 430 / 300 = 1,43

  35. DebtutilizationRatios • Debt to totalassets • Timesinterestearned

  36. Debt to TotalAssets Totaldebt / Totalassets = 600 / 1 600 = 37,5%

  37. TimesInterestEarned EBIT / Interest = 550 / 50 = 11 times

  38. Du Pont Analysis

  39. Trend Analysis

  40. Forecast and Budget

  41. Budgetting • Systematic setting of future goals • Bottom-up or top-down • Identification of external influence and risks (such as customers, competition, macroeconomics) • Identification of external influence and risks (such as capacity of production and resources, human factor) • Setting of expected growth (reduction), pipeline, percent-of-sales, investment planning

  42. Financial Forecasting • Pro forma income statement • Revenue (pipeline, funnel, percentage) • Expenses (variable, fixed) • Pro forma balance sheet • A/R, A/P, inventory • Fixed assets, liabilities, equity • Pro forma cash flow statement

  43. Operational and Financial Leverage

  44. Fixed and variableexpenses $ totalexpenses fixedexpenses No. ofunitsproduced

  45. Fixed and variableexpenses $ totalexpenses fixedexpenses No. ofunitsproduced

  46. Fixed and variableexpenses totalexpenses $ fixnedexpenses 0 No. ofunitsproduced

  47. Fixed and variableexpenses totalexpenses $ fixnedexpenses No. ofunitsproduced

  48. Break-Even Point revenue $ totalexpenses fixedexpenses No. ofunitsproduced

  49. Break-Even Point revenue profit $ totalexpenses fixedexpenses No. ofunitsproduced

More Related