100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Foundations of Finance summary

Rating
4,3
(7)
Sold
22
Pages
71
Uploaded on
24-04-2020
Written in
2019/2020

In this summary I summarized chapter 1 up to chapter 13.

Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Connected book

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13
Uploaded on
April 24, 2020
File latest updated on
April 24, 2020
Number of pages
71
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Foundations of Finance
Inhoudsopgave

Chapter 1 An introduction to the Foundations of Financial management .......................................................................................................... 3
1.1 The goal of the firm ............................................................................................................................................................................... 3
1.2 Five principles that form the foundations of finance ........................................................................................................................... 3
1.3 The role of finance in business .............................................................................................................................................................. 4
1.4 The legal forms of business organization ............................................................................................................................................. 5
1.5 Finance and the multinational firm: the new role ............................................................................................................................... 6
1.6 Developing skills for your career ........................................................................................................................................................... 7

Chapter 2 The financial markets and interest rates ............................................................................................................................................ 7
2.1 Financing of business: the movement of funds through the economy ............................................................................................... 7
2.2 Selling securities to the public............................................................................................................................................................... 8
2.3 Rates of return in the financial markets ............................................................................................................................................. 10
2.4 Interest rate determinants in a nutshell ............................................................................................................................................. 10

Chapter 3 Understanding financial statements and cash flows ........................................................................................................................ 11
3.1 The income statement ........................................................................................................................................................................ 11
3.2 The balance sheet................................................................................................................................................................................ 12
3.3 Measuring cash flows ......................................................................................................................................................................... 14
3.4 The limitations of financial statements and accounting malpractice .............................................................................................. 18

Chapter 4 Evaluating a firm’s financial performance ........................................................................................................................................ 18
4.1 Purpose of financial analysis............................................................................................................................................................... 18
4.2 Measuring key financial relationships ................................................................................................................................................ 19
4.3 The Limitations of Financial Ratio Analysis ........................................................................................................................................ 22

Chapter 5 The time value of money ................................................................................................................................................................. 22
5.1 Compound interest, future value, and present value ........................................................................................................................ 22
5.2 Annuities .............................................................................................................................................................................................. 25
5.3 Making interest rates comparable ..................................................................................................................................................... 27
5.4 The present value of an uneven stream and perpetuities ................................................................................................................. 29

Chapter 6 The meaning and measurement of risk and return .......................................................................................................................... 30
6.1 Expected return defines and measured.............................................................................................................................................. 30
6.2 Risk defined and measured ................................................................................................................................................................. 31
6.3 Rates of return: the investor’s experience.......................................................................................................................................... 32
6.4 Risk and diversification........................................................................................................................................................................ 33
6.5 The investor’s required rate of return ................................................................................................................................................ 35

Chapter 7 the valuation and characteristics of bonds....................................................................................................................................... 36
7.1 Types of bonds ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 36
7.2 Terminology and characteristics of bonds ......................................................................................................................................... 37
7.3 Defining value ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 38
7.4 What determines value? ..................................................................................................................................................................... 39




1

, 7.5 Valuation: the basic process ............................................................................................................................................................... 39
7.6 Valuing bonds ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 39
7.7 Bond yields ........................................................................................................................................................................................... 40
7.8 Bond valuation: three important relationships .................................................................................................................................. 41

Chapter 8 The valuation and characteristics of stock ....................................................................................................................................... 42
8.1 Preferred stock .................................................................................................................................................................................... 42
8.2 Valuing preferred stock ....................................................................................................................................................................... 43
8.3 Common stock ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 43
8.4 Valuing common stock ........................................................................................................................................................................ 43
8.5 The expected rate of return of stockholders ...................................................................................................................................... 44

Chapter 9 The cost of capital ............................................................................................................................................................................ 45
9.1 The cost of capital: key definitions and concepts .............................................................................................................................. 45
9.2 Determining the costs of the individual sources of capital ............................................................................................................... 46
9.3 The weighted average cost of capital ................................................................................................................................................ 48
9.4 Calculating divisions costs of capital .................................................................................................................................................. 49

Chapter 10 Capital-budgeting techniques and practice .................................................................................................................................... 51
10.1 Finding profitable projects .................................................................................................................................................................. 51
10.2 Capital-budgeting decision criteria .................................................................................................................................................... 51
10.3 Capital rotation ................................................................................................................................................................................... 53
10.4 Ranking mutually exclusive projects................................................................................................................................................... 54

Chapter 11 Cash flows and other topics in capital budgeting ........................................................................................................................... 54
11.1 Guidelines for capital budgeting......................................................................................................................................................... 54
11.2 Calculating a project’s free cash flows ............................................................................................................................................... 55
11.3 Options in capital budgeting............................................................................................................................................................... 57
11.4 Risk and the investment decision ....................................................................................................................................................... 58

Chapter 12 Determining the financing mix ....................................................................................................................................................... 59
12.1 Understanding the difference between business and financial risk ................................................................................................. 60
12.2 Break-even analysis ............................................................................................................................................................................. 60
12.3 Sources of operating leverage ............................................................................................................................................................ 62
12.4 Capital structure theory ...................................................................................................................................................................... 63
12.5 The basic tools of capital structure management ............................................................................................................................. 66

Chapter 13 Dividend policy and internal financing ........................................................................................................................................... 68
13.1 How do firms distribute firm profits to their stockholders? .............................................................................................................. 68
13.2 Does dividend policy matter to stockholders? ................................................................................................................................... 68
13.3 The dividend decision in practice ........................................................................................................................................................ 70
13.4 Stock dividends and stock splits .......................................................................................................................................................... 70
13.5 Stock repurchases................................................................................................................................................................................ 71




2

,Chapter 1 An introduction to the Foundations of
Financial management
1.1 The goal of the firm
The goal of the firm is to create value for the firm’s owners (that is, its shareholders). Thus the goal of
the firm is to “maximize shareholder wealth” by maximizing the price of the existing common stock.
Good financial decisions will increase stock price, and poor financial decisions will lead to a decline in
stock price.
Some serious practical problems arise when we use changes in the value of the firm’s stock to
evaluate financial decisions. Many things affect stock prices. Attempting to identify a reaction to a
particular financial decision would simply be impossible. To employ this goal, we need to consider
every stock price change to be a market interpretation of the worth or our decisions. Other factors,
such as changes in the economy, also affect stock prices.

1.2 Five principles that form the foundations of finance
Although it is not necessary to understand finance to understand these principles, it is necessary to
understand these principles in order to understand finance.

Principle 1: Cash flow is what matters
Accounting profits are not equal to cash flows. It is possible for a firm to generate accounting profits
but not have cash or to generate cash flows and not report accounting profits in the books.
Cash flow, and not profits, drive the value of a business.
We must determine incremental or marginal cash flows when making financial decisions.
• Incremental cash flow is the difference between the cash flows the company will produce with
versus without the investment it’s thinking about making (e.g. merchandise).

Principle 2: Money has a time value
A dollar received today is worth more than a dollar received in the future. Because we can earn
interest on money received today, it is better to receive money sooner rather than later.
Opportunity Cost – It is the cost of making a choice in terms of next best alternative that must be
forgone. Example: By lending money to your friend at zero percent interest, there is an opportunity
cost of 1% that could potentially be earned by depositing the money in a savings account in a bank.

If the benefits or cash inflows outweigh the costs, the project creates wealth and should be accepted;
if the costs or outflows outweigh the benefits or cash inflows, the project destroys wealth and should
be rejected.

Principle 3: Risk requires a reward
Investors will not take on additional risk unless they expect to be compensated with additional reward
or return. Investors expect to be compensated for “delaying consumption’’ and “taking on risk.’’
Thus, investors expect a return when they deposit their savings in a bank (e.g., delayed consumption),
and they expect to earn a relatively higher rate of return on stocks compared to a bank savings
account (e.g., taking on risk).




3

, Figure 1-1 depicts the basic notion that an investor’s rate of return should equal a rate of return of
delaying consumption plus an additional return for assuming risk.
As investors, we have expectations about what returns our investment will earn. However, we can’t
know for certain what they will be.

Principle 4: Market prices are generally right
In an efficient market, the market prices of all traded assets (such as stocks and bonds) fully reflect all
available information at any moment in time.
Thus stock prices are a useful indicator of the value of the firm. Price changes reflect changes in
expected future cash flows. Good decisions will tend to increase in stock price and vice versa.
Note there are inefficiencies in the market that may distort the market prices from value of assets.
Such inefficiencies are often caused by behavioral biases.

Principle 5: Conflicts of interest cause agency problems
The separation of management and the ownership of the firm creates an agency problem. Managers
may make decisions that are not consistent with the goal of maximizing shareholder wealth.
Agency conflict is reduced through monitoring (e.g., annual reports), compensation schemes (e.g.,
stock options), and market mechanisms (e.g., takeovers).

The essential elements of ethics and trust
Without ethics and trust, nothing works. Virtually everything we do involves some dependence on
others. Ethical behavior is doing the right thing! But what is the right thing?
Ethical dilemma—Each person has his or her own set of values, which forms the basis for personal
judgments about what is the right thing.
Sound ethical standards are important for business and personal success. Unethical decisions can
destroy shareholder wealth (e.g., Enron scandal).

1.3 The role of finance in business
Three basic issues are addressed by the study of finance:
- What long-term investments should the firm undertake? (Capital budgeting decision)
- How should the firm raise money to fund these investments? (Capital structure decision)
- How should cash flows arising from day-to-day operations be managed? (Working capital
decision)
Knowledge of financial tools is relevant for decision making in all areas of business (be it marketing,
production, etc.) and also in managing personal finances.
Decisions involve an element of time and uncertainty; financial tools help adjust for time and risk.
Decisions taken in business should be financially viable; financial tools help determine the financial
viability of decisions.

Why study finance?


4
R91,16
Get access to the full document:
Purchased by 22 students

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all 7 reviews
1 year ago

4 year ago

4 year ago

5 year ago

4 year ago

5 year ago

Very handy, best summary I've ever used.

5 year ago

Top!

4,3

7 reviews

5
3
4
3
3
1
2
0
1
0
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
serenaesmee Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
965
Member since
6 year
Number of followers
580
Documents
21
Last sold
2 weeks ago
Accountancy samenvattingen

Ik ben Serena Galama en ik ben 22 jaar oud. Ik doe momenteel de Master Accountancy & Controlling aan de Rijksuniversiteit Groningen en zal de samenvattingen die ik maak voor mijn tentamens hier op uploaden. Het kan zo zijn dat er een aantal samenvattingen missen, hier mag je mij dan gerust een berichtje over sturen! Het is daarnaast erg gewaardeerd als je een beoordeling achterlaat :). Veel succes met je tentamens!!

4,4

98 reviews

5
56
4
30
3
8
2
3
1
1

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can immediately select a different document that better matches what you need.

Pay how you prefer, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card or EFT and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions