Corporate Finance: Short-Term Finance and Planning
Corporate Finance: Short-Term Finance and Planning
Corporate Finance: Short-Term Finance and Planning
Sixth Edition
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Chapter Outline
27.1 Tracing Cash and Net Working Capital
27.2 Defining Cash in Terms of Other Elements
27.3 The Operating Cycle and the Cash Cycle
27.4 Some Aspects of Short-Term Financial Policy
27.5 Cash Budgeting
27.6 The Short-Term Financial Plan
27.7 Summary & Conclusions
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Executive Summary
• We are solidly in to the third great question of
corporate finance.
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Current
Liabilities
Current
Assets Long-Term
Debt
Current
Liabilities
Current
Assets Long-Term
How can the firm Debt
raise the money
for the required
Fixed Assets investments?
1 Tangible Shareholders’
2 Intangible Equity
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Current
Liabilities
Current
Net
Assets Working Long-Term
Capital Debt
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27.1 Tracing Cash and Net Working Capital
Other
Net Working Current
= Cash – Current +
Capital Liabilities
Assets
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27.2 Defining Cash in Terms of Other
Elements
Long- Net Working
Fixed
Cash = Term + Equity – Capital –
Assets
Debt (excluding cash)
• An increase in long-term debt and or equity leads
to an increase in cash—as does a decrease in fixed
assets or a decrease in the non-cash components
of net working capital.
• The Sources and Uses of Cash Statement follows
from this reasoning.
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27.3 The Operating Cycle and the Cash Cycle
Raw material
Cash
purchased Finished goods sold
received
Order Stock
Placed Arrives
Time
Accounts payable period
Operating cycle
Cash cycle
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Accounts
Cash cycle = Operating cycle – payable
period
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27.4 Some Aspects of Short-Term
Financial Policy
• There are two elements of the policy that a firm
adopts for short-term finance.
– The Size of the Firm’s Investment in Current Assets
– Usually measured relative to the firm’s level of total
operating revenues.
• Flexible
• Restrictive
– Alternative Financing Policies for Current Assets
– Usually measured as the proportion of short-term debt to
long-term debt.
• Flexible
• Restrictive
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The Size of the Investment in Current Assets
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Shortage costs
CA* Investment in
Current Assets ($)
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Shortage costs
CA* Investment in
Current Assets ($)
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Carrying costs
Shortage
costs
CA* Investment in
Current Assets ($)
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Alternative Financing Policies for Current
Assets
• A flexible short-term finance policy means low
proportion of short-term debt relative to long-term
financing.
• A restrictive short-term finance policy means high
proportion of short-term debt relative to long-term
financing.
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Alternative Financing Policies for Current
Assets
• In an ideal world, short-term assets are always
financed with short-term debt and long-term assets
are always financed with long-term debt.
• In this world, net working capital is always zero.
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$ Current assets =
Short-term debt
Long-term
debt plus
common
Fixed assets: stock
a growing firm
0 1 2 3 4 Time5
Grain elevator operators buy crops after harvest, store them,
and sell them during the year. Inventory is financed with short-
term debt. Net working capital is always zero.
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27.5 Cash Budgeting
• A cash budget is a primary tool of short-tun
financial planning.
• The idea is simple: Record the estimates of cash
receipts and disbursements.
• Cash Receipts
– Arise from sales, but we need to estimate when we
actually collect.
• Cash Outflow
– Payments of Accounts Payable
– Wages, Taxes, and other Expenses
– Capital Expenditures
– Long-Term Financial Planning
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27.6 The Short-Term Financial Plan
• The most common way to finance a temporary cash
deficit to arrange a short-term loan.
• Unsecured Loans
– Line of credit down at the bank
• Secured Loans
– Accounts receivable financing can e either assigned or
factored.
– Inventory loans use inventory as collateral.
• Other Sources
– Banker’s acceptances
– Commercial paper.
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27.7 Summary & Conclusions
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