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FOCUS: Financing a Business

Gain insights into financial markets, borrowing, equity financing, and saving to obtain capital resources for business growth. Learn about the stock market, reading stock tables, balance sheets, and income statements.

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FOCUS: Financing a Business

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  1. FOCUS:Financing a Business

  2. OBJECTIVES: Find out • How FINANCIAL MARKETS help businesses obtain CAPITAL RESOURCES • How businesses BORROW • What EQUITY is and how it’s used to finance business growth • How businesses SAVE

  3. OBJECTIVES: Find out • What the STOCK MARKET is & why it’s important • How to read a STOCK TABLE • What a BALANCE SHEET is & how to use it • What an INCOME STATEMENT is & how to use it

  4. INVESTMENTis the purchase of CAPITAL RESOURCES used to produce goods & services

  5. FINANCIAL MARKETSare where SAVERS exchange with BORROWERS and others who are willing to pay for the use of the money

  6. SAVERS BUSINESSES

  7. KEY POINT: • Every DOLLAR of INVESTMENT = one less DOLLAR of CONSUMPTION

  8. ASSETS: what a company OWNS LIABILITIES: what a company OWES Business Accounting:

  9. How do BUSINESSES use the FINANCIAL MARKETS to obtain money? • BORROW (debt financing) • Sell SHARES of ownership (EQUITY financing) • SAVE the money themselves (RETAINED EARNINGS – save and plow back into business!)

  10. 3 KINDS OF FINANCING • SHORT-TERM FINANCING • INTERMEDIATE-TERM FINANCING • LONG-TERM FINANCING

  11. SHORT-TERM FINANCING: • Trade credit • Unsecured loans • Secured loans • Line of credit CASH-FLOW PROBLEM pp. 266-7

  12. TYPES OF SELLERS: • RETAILER – sells directly to the public (consumers) • WHOLESALER – supplies businesses which sell directly to consumers; does NOT sell to the public – sells to businesses! pp. 266-7

  13. TRADE CREDIT: • BUY NOW, PAY LATER (30-90 days) • Business’s CAPITAL is not tied up in INVENTORY • Extended by supplier because it increases sales & profits (interest) • DISCOUNT for quick-pay! pp. 266-7

  14. UNSECURED LOANS: • No COLLATERAL • Guarantees with a PROMISSORY NOTE (specified time & interest rate) pp. 266-7

  15. SECURED LOANS: • Backed by COLLATERAL --machinery --inventories --ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE (money owed business by its customers) pp. 266-7

  16. LINE OF CREDIT: • Maximum amt. of $ a company can borrow from a bank during a period of time (1 yr.) • No new loan application; auto OK up to amt. specified pp. 266-7

  17. SHORT-TERM FINANCING: Let's Review! • Trade credit • Unsecured loans • Secured loans • Line of credit CASH-FLOW PROBLEM pp. 266-7

  18. INTERMEDIATE-TERM FINANCING: • Loans (1 to 10 yrs.) • Leasing (renting rather than buying) pp. 266-7

  19. LOANS: • 1-10 years • COLLATERAL: stocks, bonds, equipment, machinery • MORTGAGE if secured by property pp. 266-7

  20. LEASING: • Renting rather than buying • + low cost service • + income tax deduction • - often more expensive than buying pp. 266-7

  21. INTERMEDIATE-TERM FINANCING: Let's Review! • Loans (1 to 10 yrs.) • Leasing (renting rather than buying) pp. 266-7

  22. LONG-TERM FINANCING: • BONDS • STOCKS pp. 266-7

  23. PLEASE NOTE the DIRECT RELATIONSHIPbetween RISK and SIZE of REWARD! High RISK = High REWARD! Low RISK = Low REWARD! BUT...

  24. PLEASE NOTE the INVERSE RELATIONSHIPbetween RISK and LIKELIHOOD of REWARD! High RISK = LONG SHOT! Low RISK = SURE THING!

  25. BONDS: • Corporate or gov’t. I.O.U. (certificate of indebtedness) • Specified interest rate • Specified time • Pd. In full upon MATURITY pp. 266-7

  26. BONDHOLDER= Company’s creditor

  27. TWO KINDS of BONDS: Government Bonds Corporate Bonds pp. 266-7

  28. County & Municipal Bonds: • BOND ISSUE = election in which local government seeks public approval for the sale of BONDS to raise funds usually for SCHOOL or COMMUNITY improvements

  29. UNDERWRITING: • When a securities firm (investment bank) underwrites an issue of stocks or bonds, it buys a corporation’s entire issue of stock or bonds and then sells the securities to the public

  30. BONDS= Low RISK... Low RETURN!

  31. The BOND… • Is given to the lender (BONDHOLDER) • By a borrower (THE BOND SELLER -- the financial intermediary)

  32. TERMS of the LOAN: The BORROWER will pay: The BORROWER will pay: INTEREST (the profit paid the lender for the use of his or her money) • PRINCIPAL (entire amount borrowed)

  33. VOCABULARY TERMS: • FACE VALUE: the purchase price of the bond (PAR value or principal) • MATURITY DATE: the particular day at which time the borrower promises to pay back the loan in full (both principal and interest) • COUPON RATE: the predetermined rate of interest

  34. BOND RATINGS: • RISK is measured by the credit rating of the bond’s issuer. • RATINGS indicate the ability of a corporation of local government to repay its debts. MOODY’S INVESTOR SERVICES rates bonds on a scale from AAA (highest quality) to C (no interest being paid, bankruptcy filed or in default) DDD – veeeeeeeeerry risky!

  35. BONDS GOVERNMENT BONDS CORPORATE BONDS Higher RISK! Higher RETURNS! • Lower RISK! • Lower RETURNS!

  36. STOCKS: • EQUITY financing • Shares of ownership pp. 266-7

  37. 2 Ways to Make Money from Stocks: • DIVIDENDS (share of profits pd. to stockholders) • CAPITAL GAINS (profits from sale of stock)

  38. STOCKHOLDER= Company’s part owner

  39. TWO KINDS of Stock Companies: Private Company Public Company pp. 266-7

  40. TWO KINDS of STOCK: Common Stock Preferred Stock pp. 266-7

  41. Common Stock: PROXY = gives another permission to cast your vote for you • issued by all public corporations • Owners have voting rights; elect board of directors • Pays DIVIDENDS based on performance • Value varies with corp. performance • Last to be pd. If corp. fails pp. 266-7

  42. Preferred Stock: • not issued by all corps. • No voting rights Value varies with performance • PREFERENTIAL treatment= --pays fixed dividend before common stockholders are pd. --If corp. fails, pd. before common stockholders are pd. pp. 266-7

  43. SALE of STOCKS & BONDS: • Primary or New Issues Market • Secondary Market (what you think of commonly as the stock market) TWO VERY DIFFERENT STOCK MARKETS!

  44. PRIMARY MKT: Not the one you think of as the STOCK MARKET! IPO • IPO = initial public offering • Investment bankers sell new shares of stock for corps. • Proceeds go to corps. w/ profit for investment bankers who UNDERWRITE the STOCK ISSUE

  45. UNDERWRITING: • When a securities firm (investment bank) underwrites an issue of stocks or bonds, it buys a corporation’s entire issue of stock or bonds and then sells the securities to the public

  46. SECONDARY MKT: The ONE you think of as the STOCK MARKET! • Commonly called the STOCK MARKET • Stock sold on EXCHANGES or OTC (over-the-counter) • Proceeds go to stockholder who sells w/ profit to broker NOT to corporation • w/o 2ndary mkt to trade in, few would buy new issues

  47. 2 Ways to Make Money from Stocks: • DIVIDENDS (share of profits pd. to stockholders) • CAPITAL GAINS (profits from sale of stock)

  48. Organized Exchanges: Real places in real spaces! Dow Jones Industrial Avg. • NYSE: New York Stock Exchange (2000+ of the largest & best-known corps.) • AMEX: American Stock Exchange (about 1000 midsize corps. w/ strong growth potential) • Regional exchanges: Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston • Foreign exchanges: FTSE,CAC-40

  49. Over-the-Counter Mkt: NOT real places in CYBER spaces! • Decentralized, computerized markets • NASDAQ: National Assoc. of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System

  50. Securities Exchange Commission: • Federal governmental agency which regulates sales and protects investors • 5 members appt. by U.S. Pres. • Investigate charges of fraud & violations like insider trading

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