Overview - Goals and Functions
Overview - Goals and Functions
PGP – 1 : Term 2
K Kiran Kumar
IIM- Indore
Who am I?
Kiran Kumar, K
✓ Education n Research profile
✓ PhD Finance from Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore (2006)
✓ Have about thirty+ research papers and five best research paper awards
✓ Work Experience
✓Professor, IIM Indore June 2019 onwards
✓ Associate Professor, IIM Indore, June 2014 – June 2019
✓ Assistant Professor, National Institute of Securities Markets, Mumbai
✓ Was at ISB in various positions (Researcher, Senior Researcher and Visiting Scholar )
between April 2005 to April 2009
✓ Prior to that, with ICICI Research Centre (2004-05)
✓ Exposure - High Frequency data analysis / Market Microstructure / Derivatives
✓ Extensively dealt with high frequency data in my research
✓ One of very few academics holding proprietary NSE complete order book data
✓ Contact co-ordinates:
✓ kirankumar@iimidr.ac.in / Extn: 514 / 9589314520;
Expected Value that will be Growth Assets Equity Residual Claim on cash flows
created by future investments Significant Role in management
Perpetual Lives
Growth Assets
Firm vs Equity ?
Big Picture of Finance I & II
The Three Major Decisions
• The Allocation / Investment decision
– Where do you invest the scarce resources of your business?
– What makes for a good investment?
• Who will take these decisions and what should be their objective?
What n Why do we need an objective?
• All other goals of the firm are intermediate ones leading to firm value
maximization, or operate as constraints on firm value maximization.
Why traditional corporate financial theory often focuses
on maximizing stock prices as opposed to firm value?
FINANCIAL MARKETS
The Agency Cost Problem
• The interests of managers, stockholders, and
bondholders can diverge. What is good for one
group may not necessarily for another.
– Managers may have other interests (job security, perks, compensation) that they put
over stockholder wealth maximization.
– Actions that make stockholders better off (increasing dividends, investing in risky
projects) may make bondholders worse off.
– Actions that increase stock price may not necessarily increase stockholder wealth, if
markets are not efficient or information is imperfect.
– Actions that makes firms better off may create such large social costs that they make
society worse off.
Managers put
Have little control their interests
over managers above stockholders
FINANCIAL MARKETS
I. Stockholder Interests vs. Management Interests
FINANCIAL MARKETS
The Modified Objective Function
• For publicly traded firms in reasonably efficient
markets, where bondholders (lenders) are protected:
– Maximize Stock Price: This will also maximize firm value
Studies find only a modest positive correlation between CEO compensation and share
prices. Generous pay packages in poor performing companies!!!
Increasing Shareholder Value
• Greater customer service
Revenue (higher market share,
increased gross margins).
• Greater product availability
Profitability
• Lower cost of goods sold,
transportation, warehousing,
Costs material handling and
distribution management
costs
Shareholder
value
• Lower raw materials and
finished goods inventory
Working • Shorter ‘order-to-cash’
capital cycles
Invested
capital
•Fewer physical assets (e.g.
Fixed trucks, warehouses, material
capital handling equipment)
Session plan – Finance I
• Session 2 & 3 – Projecting Financial Statements
• Session 4, 5 & 6 -- Investment Decision (Working Capital)
• Session 7 & 8 – Overview of Financial System & Markets
• Session 9 – Framework to value cash flows (Discounting &
Compounding)
• Session 10 – Valuing Debt instruments (Cost of Debt)
• Session 11 – Valuing un-listed firm &
• Session 12 – Framework of Risk & Return
• Session 13 – CAPM (Cost of Equity)
• Session 14 – Efficient Markets – Predicting future returns ?
• Session 15 – Behavioral Finance and tie up topics covered to
Firm Value Maximization
For Session 2: Review different ratios that you learnt . Match the companies (1), (2), (3), (4) &
(5) with that of selected ratios of (A), (B),(C),(D) and (E).
Identify the Industry: Operating and Competitive characteristics of a company’s industry
greatly influence its investment in the various types of assets, the riskiness of these investments
and the financial structure of its balance sheet.
Match following companies with their corresponding b/s and financial ratios for the year 2009
(1) Electric Utility (4) Automated test equipment / systems comp
(2) Japanese Automobile Manufacturer (5) Upscale apparel retailer
(3) Discount general merchandise retailer