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Principles of Finance II

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The course examines the theory of financial decision-making by firms and examines the behaviour of the capital markets in which these decisions are taken. The topics covered are the theory of capital budgeting under certainty in perfect and imperfect capital markets, sources of funds, basic theory of capital structure and the cost of capital, company dividend decisions and financial markets and institutions. This course covers the same topics as FM215. Thus, both FM211 and FM215 are equivalent content-wise. However, compared to FM215, this course puts less emphasis on the underlying statistical theory and relies less on the use of mathematical methods. Nonetheless, the course is quantitative in nature, and familiarity with mathematical and statistical methods taught in first-year courses will be assumed. All lecture notes.

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December 31, 2025
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FM211 Lecture Notes
Week 1 notes
Introduction to Corporate Finance
 Corporate finance studies how firms make financial decisions.
 A corporation is a legal entity distinct from its owners (shareholders), characterized
by:
 Separation of ownership and control: Shareholders own the firm but do not
manage it.
 Limited liability: Shareholders are not personally liable for corporate debts; the
most they can lose is their investment.
 Corporation invest in real assets and finance these investments by selling financial
assets (e.g., equity, debt).
 As legal entity, corporations:
 Can be sued and sue others.
 Are liable for taxation.
 Can enter contracts.
 Goal of the firm: Maximize shareholder wealth

Organizational Chart of a Typical Corporation




Chief Financial Officer (CFO): Oversees the financial management of the firm.
 Controller: Manages tax and accounting.
 Treasurer: Manages investments in real assets and interactions with financial
markets.

,The Key Financial Decisions




Four main areas:
1. Valuation and Investment Decisions – How does the firm invest money?
 Ensuring cash flows are correctly computed.
 Evaluating if the return rate is appropriate.
2. Financing Decisions – How does the firm get the money?
 Identifying costs and benefits of various financing options (debt, equity, etc.).
 Choosing the optimal mix of financing instruments.
3. Dividend Decisions – What does the firm do with the leftover money?
 Determining how much to return to shareholders
 Deciding in what form (dividends, share buybacks, etc.)
4. Risk Management and Hedging – How does the firm manage financial risks?
 Identifying which risks should be hedged.
 Selecting appropriate instruments to hedge risk.

Capital Budgeting
The process of selecting and managing a firm’s long-term investments.
Investment projects involve expenditures that generate future returns.

Types of Investment Evaluations
1. Standalone projects
 A project is evaluated independently.
 Decision rule: Accept if it is better than doing nothing.
2. Mutually exclusive projects
 Choosing one project excludes another.
 Decision rule: Accept the highest positive NPV project.

, Opportunity Cost of Capital




Definition: The return shareholders could earn on a financial asset of equivalent risk
 The minimum return a project must generate to be considered worthwhile.
 If a firm does not invest, shareholders could invest their money elsewhere.

Net Present Value (NPV)
The sum of all expected discounted cash flows over a project’s life.
Formula:
E (C F t )
NPV =∑ t
( 1+r )
Where,
 E(C Ft ): expected cash flows
 r : opportunity cost of capital
 t : time period

Decision rule:
 Standalone projects: Accept if NPV>0.
 Mutually exclusive projects: Accept the project with the highest NPV.
Interpretation:
 NPV > 0: Project increases firm value.
 NPV < 0: Project decreases firm value.
 NPV =0 : Project neither adds or reduces firm value.
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