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Introduction to Corporate Finance. Chapter One. FIN 6301 Financial Management. Instructor: Mary Chaffin SOM 2.208 972-883-2646 chaf@utdallas.edu Office Hours: Monday 4:00-6:30 p.m. Wednesday 2:00-3:30 p.m. Corporate Finance. Ross, Westerfield and Jaffee, 7 th Edition
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Introduction to Corporate Finance Chapter One
FIN 6301Financial Management • Instructor: • Mary Chaffin • SOM 2.208 • 972-883-2646 • chaf@utdallas.edu • Office Hours: • Monday 4:00-6:30 p.m. • Wednesday 2:00-3:30 p.m.
Corporate Finance • Ross, Westerfield and Jaffee, 7th Edition • www.utdallas.edu/~chaf • Copies of the transparencies. • Solutions to end of chapter problems. • Old exams. • www.mhhe.com/rwj • Appendix D: Using a Financial Calculator. • Review material and practice quizzes.
Grading • Exam I 30% or 15% • Exam II 30% or 15% • Final Exam 40% • Assignments 15% • Formula sheet allowed on exams - not quizzes. • Notice of Policy on Cheating
Other Resources • Wall Street Journal • Barron’s • Financial Calculator
The Four Basic Areas of Finance • Corporate Finance • Broadest field • Specific to operations of a business • Investments • Interrelation on a smaller scale then money and capital markets • Money and Capital Markets • Workings of the financial system • Broad flow of money • International Finance
Areas of Finance Investors The Firm Financial Markets Financial Intermediaries
Financial Calculators • HP 10B ($30) • HP 17B II ($80) • HP 12C ($70) • HP 19B II ($100+) • TI BA II + ($30)
Financial Calculators • HP 10B • TI BA II+ • Tips on using calculator: • Set p/y=1 (This comes set at 12 on a new calculator) • Clear registers before each use • Set decimals to 4 places
Solution Methods • Numerical – using regular calculator without financial functions. • Interest Tables - end of text. • Financial Calculator – using five specific keys which correspond to the five most commonly used DCF variables: N i PV PMT FV
What is Corporate Finance? Corporate Finance addresses the following three questions: • What long-term investments should the firm engage in? • How can the firm raise the money for the required investments? • How much short-term cash flow does a company need to pay its bills?
Microsoft to Dole OutIts Cash Hoard • In an extraordinary move to shower its cash hoard upon shareholders, Microsoft Corp. said it will make a one-time dividend payment this year of $32 billion and buy back up to $30 billion of the company's stock over the next four years. The company also said it will double the dividend it pays out annually to $3.5 billion, or 32 cents a share. • The plans, which Microsoft valued at up to $75 billion over four years, are believed to represent the largest corporate cash disbursement in history. They mark a turning point for high technology's most successful company.
25% Debt 70% Debt 30% Equity 75% Equity Capital Structure The value of the firm can be thought of as a pie. 50% Debt The goal of the manager is to increase the size of the pie. 50% Equity The Capital Structure decision can be viewed as how best to slice up a the pie. If how you slice the pie affects the size of the pie, then the capital structure decision matters.
The Financial Manager To create value, the financial manager should: • Try to make smart investment decisions. • Try to make smart financing decisions.
Corporate Securities as Contingent Claims on Total Firm Value • The basic feature of a debt is that it is a promise by the borrowing firm to repay a fixed dollar amount of by a certain date. • The shareholder’s claim on firm value is the residual amount that remains after the debtholders are paid. • If the value of the firm is less than the amount promised to the debtholders, the shareholders get nothing.
Payoff to debt holders Payoff to shareholders $F $F Value of the firm (X) Value of the firm (X) Debt and Equity as Contingent Claims If the value of the firm is more than $F, debt holders get a maximum of $F. If the value of the firm is less than $F, share holders get nothing. $F If the value of the firm is more than $F, share holders get everything above $F. Debt holders are promised $F. If the value of the firm is less than $F, they get the whatever the firm if worth. Algebraically, the bondholder’s claim is: Min[$F,$X] Algebraically, the shareholder’s claim is: Max[0,$X –$F]
Combined Payoffs to debt holders and shareholders Payoff to shareholders Payoff to debt holders $F Value of the firm (X) Combined Payoffs to Debt and Equity If the value of the firm is less than $F, the shareholder’s claim is: Max[0,$X –$F] = $0 and the debt holder’s claim is Min[$F,$X] = $X. The sum of these is = $X $F If the value of the firm is more than $F, the shareholder’s claim is: Max[0,$X –$F] = $X –$F and the debt holder’s claim is: Min[$F,$X] = $F. The sum of these is = $X Debt holders are promised $F.
The Corporate Firm • The corporate form of business is the standard method for solving the problems encountered in raising large amounts of cash. • However, businesses can take other forms.
Forms of Business Organization • The Sole Proprietorship • The Partnership • General Partnership • Limited Partnership • The Corporation • Advantages and Disadvantages • Liquidity and Marketability of Ownership • Control • Liability • Continuity of Existence • Tax Considerations
Goals of the Corporate Firm • The traditional answer is that the managers of the corporation are obliged to make efforts to maximize shareholder wealth.
The Set-of-Contracts Perspective • The firm can be viewed as a set of contracts. • One of these contracts is between shareholders and managers. • The managers will usually act in the shareholders’ interests. • The shareholders can devise contracts that align the incentives of the managers with the goals of the shareholders. • The shareholders can monitor the managers behavior. • This contracting and monitoring is costly.
Managerial Goals • Managerial goals may be different from shareholder goals • Expensive perquisites • Survival • Independence • Increased growth and size are not necessarily the same thing as increased shareholder wealth.
Do Shareholders Control Managerial Behavior? • Shareholders vote for the board of directors, who in turn hire the management team. • Contracts can be carefully constructed to be incentive compatible. • There is a market for managerial talent—this may provide market discipline to the managers—they can be replaced. • If the managers fail to maximize share price, they may be replaced in a hostile takeover.
Financial Markets • Primary Market • When a corporation issues securities, cash flows from investors to the firm. • Usually an underwriter is involved • Secondary Markets • Involve the sale of “used” securities from one investor to another. • Securities may be exchange traded or trade over-the-counter in a dealer market.
Exchange Trading of Listed Stocks • Auction markets are different from dealer markets in two ways: • Trading in a given auction exchange takes place at a single site on the floor of the exchange. • Transaction prices of shares are communicated almost immediately to the public.