Module 01 - Finman Introduction
Module 01 - Finman Introduction
ACTIVITIES OF FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT
CRUZ, TALION AND TIMBANG
CA51012 Financial Management
UST Alfredo M. Velayo College of Accountancy
University of Santo Tomas
A. LEARNING OBJECTIVES
• List some of the concepts of the field of finance
• Recognize that a firm can have many different forms of organization
• Describe how the relationship of risk to return is a central of focus of finance
• Explain the primary goal of financial managers
• Recall that financial managers attempt to achieve wealth maximization through
daily activities such as credit and inventory management and through longer-
term decisions related to raising funds
• Explain future and present value and how they relate to time value of money
B. FIELD OF FINANCE
• Finance fits between economics and accounting
• Corporate Finance
• Principles used to determine which assets the firm should develop
or buy
E1. INVESTMENTS VS CORPORATE
FINANCE
• Financial management
• Term can be used interchangeable with corporate finance
• Related to various investment topics
• Include how outside investors evaluate the company
F. THE VALUE OF STUDYING FINANCE
• Career opportunities include
• Corporate financial officers, banker, stockbroker, financial
analyst, portfolio manager, investment banker, financial
consultant, and personal financial planner
• CEO reports directly to the BOD
• Marketing managers interested in return on investment of
marketing initiatives
G. ACTIVITIES OF FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT
• Financial managers perform numerous activities
• Daily activities include monitor cash balances, manage credit
decisions, monitor inventory levels, collect and distribute cash
• Less routine activities include negotiations with banks for loans,
sale of stocks and bonds, establishment of capital budgeting and
dividend plans
• Risk and return trade off determined to maximize the market value
• Influences operational side (capital versus labor or Product A vs
Product B)
• Influences financial mix (stock vs bonds vs retained earnings)
H. FUNCTIONS OF FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT
• DAILY
• Credit management, inventory control, receipt and disbursement
of funds
• OCCASIONAL
• Stock issue, bond issue, capital budgeting, dividend declaration
• PROFITABILITY
• Trade off between risk and return with the goal of maximizing
shareholder wealth
I. GOALS OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
• PRIMARY GOAL – maximization of profit
• Drawbacks
• Change in profit may also represent change in risk
• Fails to consider timing of benefits
• Impossible task of accurately measuring key variable profit
• Problems with inflation and international currency
transactions further complicate the issue
J. VALUATION APPROACH
• Ultimate measure of performance – how earnings are valued by
investor
• FV = PV (1 + i)n
• FV = future value
• PV – present value
• i = interest rate
• n = number of periods
K1. PRESENT VALUE
• Is the idea that a dollar received today is worth more than a dollar
that we expect to received in the future
• Future value of a dollar is greater than a dollar
• Present value is today’s dollar value
• FV = PV (1 + i)n
• FV = future value
• PV – present value
• i = interest rate
• n = number of periods
L. MAXIMIZING SHAREHOLDER
WEALTH
• Shareholder wealth maximization is the broad goal of the firm
• Achieved through high value for the firm
• 302 – CEO and CFO to sign and certify that the financial statements are
accurate
• 303, 304, 306 – ethical conduct by BOD, Executives and key employees
• INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS
• Have more to say bout how publicly owned companies are
managed
• Able to vote large blocks of shares for election of BOD
O. ROLE OF FINANCIAL MARKETS
• Financial markets – meeting place for people, corporations and
institutions
• Have either a need to lend, borrow or invest money
• Secondary market
• Securities bought/sold amongst investors
• Prices of securities keep changing continually
• Financial managers given feedback about firms performance
P1. ALLOCATION OF CAPITAL
• Return maximization and risk minimization
• Investors can choose risk level that meets objective, maximizes
return for given risk level
• Partnership
• Corporation
Stock’s Stock’s
Intrinsic Value Market Price
Market Equilibrium:
Intrinsic Value = Stock Price
Z. SHOULD STOCKHOLDER WEALTH MAXIMIXZATION BE
THOUGHT OF AS A LONG OR SHORT TERM GOAL
• Stockholder wealth maximization is a long-run goal. Companies,
and consequently the stockholders, prosper by management making
decisions that will produce long-term earnings increases. Actions
that are continually shortsighted often “catch up” with a firm and, as
a result, it may find itself unable to compete effectively against its
competitors.
• There has been much criticism in recent years that U.S. firms are too
short-run profit-oriented. A prime example is the U.S. auto industry,
which has been accused of continuing to build large “gas guzzler”
automobiles because they had higher profit margins rather than
retooling for smaller, more fuel-efficient models.
AA. SOME IMPORTANT BUSINESS
TRENDS
• Corporate scandals have reinforced the importance of business
ethics, and have spurred additional regulations and corporate
oversight.