1 / 20

Long-Term Financial Planning and Corporate Growth

Long-Term Financial Planning and Corporate Growth. Adapted from Fundamentals of Corporate Finance RWJR, Fourth Canadian Edition (Chapter 4). Definition. Financial planning establishes guidelines for change and growth in a firm.

belva
Télécharger la présentation

Long-Term Financial Planning and Corporate Growth

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. Long-Term Financial Planning and Corporate Growth Adapted from Fundamentals of Corporate Finance RWJR, Fourth Canadian Edition (Chapter 4)

  2. Definition • Financial planning establishes guidelines for change and growth in a firm. • It focuses on the major elements of a firm's financial and investment policies without examining the individual components of those policies in detail.

  3. How it works • Forecasted growth in assets has to be matched with a corresponding growth in financing: • Start with forecasting the growth in assets • Determine how much additional financing is needed • Determine whether internal funds are sufficient • If necessary, plan for external financing

  4. Exemplification: Rosengarten Corp. Balance sheet ($) & Income Statement

  5. Assumption • Sales are forecasted to increase by 25%

  6. Pro-forma income statement ($)

  7. Pro-forma balance sheet ($)

  8. Pro-forma balance sheet ($)

  9. Pro-forma balance sheet ($)

  10. Implication: • We need $565 in external financing!

  11. External financing and growth • EFN = Increase in TA - Addition to RE • EFN = (A)(sg) - (p)(S)(R)(1+sg) • EFN = $750 - $110 = $640 • The difference between $565 and $640 = $75, the increase in accounts payable. • If you consider accounts payable internal financing, then • EFN = Increase in TA - Addition to RE - Increase in Acc. payable • where: • A = total assets • S = current sales • p = profit margin = net income/sales • R = retention ratio • sg = rate of growth in sales

  12. Internal growth rate: • The growth rate a firm can maintain with internal financing only (ignore increase in accounts payable) • IGR = (p)(S)(R) / [A - (p)(S)(R)] • IGR = ROA(R) / [1-ROA(R)] • IGR = (0.132)(1,000)(2/3) / [3,000 - (0.132)(1,000)(2/3)] = 3.02%

  13. Sustainable growth rate: • The growth rate a firm can maintain given its capital structure, ROE, and retention ratio. • EFN = Increase in TA - Addition to RE - New borrowing • SGR = (ROE)(R) / [1 - (ROE)(R)] = (0.0734)(2/3) / [1 - (0.073)(2/3)] • SGR = 5.14% • SGR = (p)(S/A)(1+D/E)(R)/[1- (p)(S/A)(1+D/E)(R)]

  14. Growth and capacity usage • What happens if the firm is not operating at full capacity? • Case (i): Firm operates at 70% capacity • Case (ii): Firm operates at 90% capacity • Additional information: when reaching full capacity the firm will have to expand production by building additional operating plants. Each plant has the potential to increase output/sales by 30 percentage points.

  15. Case (i): Pro-forma balance sheet at 25% growth

  16. Case (i): EFN • We need $3,300 - $3,185 = $115 in external financing. • We could borrow $115 in the short term by issuing commercial paper or short-term notes.

  17. Case (ii): Pro-forma balance sheet at 25% growth

  18. Case (ii): EFN • We need $3,840 - $3,185 = $655 in external financing. • We need to borrow in the long-run and/or issue additional equity.

  19. Comment • Calculating EFN, IGR, SGR with the help of formulas makes the implicit assumption that the firm is operating at full capacity. In reality this is seldom the case. • Forecasting financial growth with the help of pro-forma financial statements is always preferable.

  20. Determinants of growth: • Profit margin: An increase in the profit margin, increases the firm's ability to generate funds internally and thereby increases its sustainable growth. • Dividend policy: A decrease in the payout ratio increases internally generated equity, and thus increases sustainable growth. • Capital structure: An increase in the firm's leverage makes additional debt financing available, and hence increases the sustainable growth rate. • Total asset turnover: An increase in S/A decreases the firm's need for new assets as sales grow. Hence it increases the sustainable growth rate.

More Related