Based on book: Fundamentals of corporate finance fifth edition (Wiley)
1. Financial manager and the firm:
Role of the financial manager:
Maximizing the price of firm’s stock will maximize value of a firm and the wealth of its shareholders/owners
3 fundamental decisions in financial management
Capital budgeting: identify which long-term assets to acquire to maximize net benefits for the firm
affect long-term assets (productive assets, tangible or intangible)
Financing: determine best way to pay for for short-term and long-term assets
determine firm’s cpital structure
affect long-term debt and equity thatwill be used to finance firm’s long-term productive asset and net working capital
Working capital: decide how to manage short-term resources and obligations by adjusting current assets and current liabilities to promote growth in cash flow
affect current asset and current liabilities
BOD is representative of all shareholders
mostly large shareholders
sometimes independent experts
Consists of:
audit comittee
governance comittee
remuneration committee: manage composation and performance policies
Financial markets include markets for trading financial assets such as stocks and bonds rather than real assets
Financial institutions include banks, credit unions, insurance companies, and finance companies
Financial system at work
Money is collected from small amounts (borrowed) and invested in large amounts (loaned)
System directs money to the best investment opportunities in the economy (return and risk)
→ Lenders earn profit from lending and borrowing spread
How funds flow through the financial system
Directly vs Indirectly:
Directly through financial markets: creation and sale of financial securities directly to leader/saver
borrower/spedner deals with lender/savers
Investment Bank and money center banks help with origination, underwriting and distribution of new debt and equity
Origination is the process of preparing a security issues for sale
Underwriting is a service to assist firms in selling their debt or equity securities in a direct financing market
Distribution is the process of marketing and reselling the securities to investors
Indirectly through financial institution: institutions invest in Financial Assets by collect money from lender/saver and make loans in larger amounts to borrower/spender
Primary: Wholesale market where firms’ new securities are issued and sold for the first time
Secondary: Retail market where previously issued securities are resold (traded)
enable investors to buy and sell securities frequently
active secondary markets → higher price in primary market
→ companies whose securities have active secondary markets enjoy lower funding costs than similar firms whose securities do not have active secondary markets.
no new money goes into the firm when a secondary market transaction takes place.
Marketability is the ease with which a security can be sold and converted into cash. A security’s marketability depends in part on the costs of trading and searching for information, so-called transaction costs
Liquidity is the ability to convert an asset into cash quickly without loss of value
Broker vs Dealer:
Broker bring buys and sellers together and learn commission fee
Dealers buy from sellers, store to inventory and sell to buyers
Exchanges and over-the-counter markets
Exchange: location where sellers and buyers meet to conduct transactions
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)
Over-the-Counter Market: dealers conduct transactions over the phone or via computer
National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ)
Money and capital markets
Money market: market for low-risk securities with maturities of less than one year
Treasury bills (T-Bills), Commercial paper
Capital market: market for securities with maturities longer than one year
Bonds, Common stock
Capital market are less marketable, higher defauft risk and have longer maturities
Public and private markets
Public markets are organized financial markets where the general public buys and sells securities through their stockbrokers
Private markets involve direct transactions between two parties, often called private placements
Advantages: faster, lower transaction costs
Disadvantages:
Privately placed securities cannot legally be sold in the public markets because they lack SEC registration
Dollar amounts that can be raised tend to be smaller
Futures and options markets
Derivative securities derive their value from some underlying asset
Futures Contract: contracts for the future delivery of assets such as securities, foreign currencies, interest cash flows, or commodities
Options Contract call for the option writer to buy or sell an asset if called upon to do so by the option buyer
Both futures and options can be used to hedge risk
Efficient market hypothesis a theory concerning the extent to which information is reflected in security prices and how information gets incorporated into security prices
Strong-Form Efficiency
Security prices reflect all information, both public and private
Even inside information is reflected in prices
Semistrong-Form Efficiency
Security prices always reflect all public information
Inside, or confidential information, is not reflected in prices
Weak-Form Efficiency
Security prices only reflect historical information
amortization describes the way in which the principal (the amount borrowed) is repaid over the life of a loan.
amortization schedule a table that shows the loan balance at the beginning and end of each period, the payment made during that period, and how much of that payment represents interest and how much represents repayment of principal
With an amortizing loan, some portion of each loan payment goes to paying down the principal
Columns:
Year
Beginning principal balance (1), last year’s Ending Principal Balance
Total monthly/annual payment (2), same every period (CF)
Interest payment (3)
Principal paid (2) - (3) - (4)
Ending Principal Balance (1) - (4) - (5)
Finding interest rate: must use trial and error or calculator
Future value of an Annuity
Future value of an annuity computations typically involve some type of saving activity, such as a monthly savings plan
Another application is computing future values for retirement or pension plans with constant contributions
Given that FVAn=PVAn×(1+i)n, substituting PVA
FVAn=iCF×[1−(1+i)n1]×(1+i)n
FVAn=iCF×[(1+i)n−1]
FVAn=CF×[i(1+i)n−1]=CF×FV annuity factor
Annuities due:
an annuity in which payments are made at the beginning of each period
The present or future value of an annuity due is always higher than that of an ordinary annuity that is otherwise identical
the first cash flow occurs at the beginning of the first period
Annuity transformation method:
Annuity due value=Ordinary annuity value×(1+i)
Level cash flows: perpetuities:
A perpetuity is a series of equally spaced and level cash flows that goes on forever
The most important perpetuities in the securities markets today are preferred stock issues
Perpetuities:
A stream of equal cash flows that goes on forever
Equation for the present value of a perpetuity can be derived from the present value of an annuity equation
PVP=iCF if cash flow is at the end of the first period
Cash flows that grow at a constant rate
Growing annuity
Equally-spaced cash flows that increase in size at a constant rate for a finite number of periods
PVAn=i−gCFi×[1−(1+i1+g)n] where CFi is cash flow one period in the future (CF0∗(1+i%))
only when the growth rate is less than the discount rate
Growing perpetuity:
Equally-spaced cash flows that increase in size at a constant rate forever
PVP=i−gCFi where CFi is cash flow one period in the future (CF0∗(1+i%))
The affective annual interest rate
Annual Percenrage Rate, APR: periodic rate × nb of periods
effective annual interest rate, EAR: annual interest rate that takes compounding over the course of a year into account
EAR = (1+mAPR)m−1
The Appropriate Interest Rate Factor: any time you do a future value or present value calculation, either use the interest rate per period (quoted rate/m) or the EAR as the interest rate factor
8. Bond valuation and structure of interest rate
Corporate bonds
Market for corporate bonds
The most important investors are life insurance companies, pension funds, and mutual funds
Transactions tend to be in very large dollar amounts
less efficient compared to stocks or U.S. treasury bills and bond
Bond price information:
Only a small fraction of the bonds outstanding are traded each day
Mostly negotiated directly between the buyer and seller, with limited centralized reporting of the sales
Corporate bond:
A type of Fixed-income securities: debt instruments that pay interest in amounts that are fixed for the life of the contract
Features of corporate Bonds:
Long-term claims against company assets
Face, or par, value is $1,000
Coupon rate is the annual coupon payment (C) / bond’s face value (F)
Coupon payment is a fixed amount paid to lenders for the life of the contract (typically with a semiannual or annual payment)
Types of corporate bonds:
Vanilla bonds, debentures, are unsecured:
Coupon payments fixed for the life of the bond
Repay principal and retire the bonds at maturity
Contracts have the features and provisions found in most bond covenants
Annual or semiannual coupon payments
Zero coupon bond:
No coupon payment, only face value at maturity
Sold at a discount compared to face value
Convertible bonds:
May be exchanged for shares of the firm’s stock
Sell for a higher price than a comparable non- convertible bond
Bondholders benefit if the market value of the company’s stock gets high enough
Bond valuation
Steps:
estimate the expected future cash flows
determine the required yield, rate of return, or discount rate (depends on riskiness of the future cash flows)
market interest rate
compute present alue of future cash flows
Bond valuation formula:
Then PB (current value/price of a bond = PV (present value of coupon payments) + PV (present value of Principal payment)
PB=(1+i)C1+(1+i)2C2+...+(1+i)nCn+Fn
Par, premium and discount bonds
Par bond: If a bond’s coupon rate is equal to its yield, the price will equal the face value
Premium bond: If a bond’s coupon rate is more than its yield, the price will be higher than the face value
Likely to happen when interest rates are falling
Discount bond:
If a bond’s coupon rate is less than its yield, the price will be less than the face value
Likely to happen when interest rates are rising
Semiannual compounding:
i=i/m
C=C/m
Zero coupon bonds: discount simply
PB=(1+i/m)mnFmn
Bond yields:
YTM, Yield to maturity:
actual rate of return (if buy bond now) != interest rate (used to calculate what bond price should be)
EAY, Effective annual yield:
EAY=(1+mquoted interested rate)m−1
quoted interested rate = nb of periods * YTM
Realized Yield: return earned on a bond given cash flow actually received
Interest rate risk
uncertainty about future bond values due to the unpredictability of interest rates
Bond theorems:
Bond prices are inversely related to interest rate movements
interest rate increase → more discount → cheaper present value
For a given change in interest rates, prices on longer-term bonds change more than prices of shorter-term bonds
longer-term bond’s present value discount much more or much less compared to shot-term bond
For a given change in interest rates, prices of lower-coupon bonds change more than prices of higher-coupon bonds
more capital concentrate at longer period discounts
→long term, zero coupon is most sentitive
Bond theorem application: if interest rates are expected to increase, avoid long-term bonds
If interest rates are expected to decrease, buy zero-coupon bonds
Call provision: allow bond issuer to purchase a bond from bondholder at a pretermined price before maturity
more likely to be called when interest rates decline
CIP, call premium, =icallable−inon-callable>0
Default risk: borrow might not pay back interest and or principal
DRP, default risk premium, =idr−irf>0
interest for default risk - interest for risk-free rate
Bond ratings: rank bonds in order of probability of default
Investment grade / noninvestment grade
State and federal laws typically require commercial banks, insurance companies, pension funds, certain other financial companies, and government agencies to purchase only investment-grade securities
The term structure of interest rate
refers to the relationship between yield to maturity and term-to-maturity on a bond
Yield curve:
Ascending or normal yield curves slope upward from left to right and imply higher interest rates are likely
Descending or inverted yield curves slope downward from left to right and imply lower interest rates are likely
Flat yield curves imply interest rates are unlikely to change
Factors that shape the yield curve:
Real rate of interest
Expected rate of inflation:
if higher inflation is forecast, the YC slope upward because longer-term yields will contain larger inflation premium than shorter-term yields
interest rate risk
The longer the maturity of a security, the greater its interest rate risk (the risk of selling the security at a lower price) and the higher the YTM
The interest rate risk premium adds upward bias to the slope of the yield curve
Cumulative effect of factors that shape the yield curve:
In an economic expansion
The real rate of interest and inflation premium increase monotonically
Interest rate risk increases
In an economic contraction
The real rate of interest and inflation premium decrease monotonically
Interest rate risk decreases
Yield curve to recession:
expectation: investors expect long-term to have lower interest rate and inflation rate
9. Stock valuation:
Market for stocks:
secondary market
NASDAQ
NYSE
The world’s stock exchange
Efficiency of secondary markets
4 types of secondary market, order from least to most efficient:
Direct search: cost of locating and negoriating
Broker: cost of commission paid to broker who bears the cost
Dealer: cost of spread
Auction
Stock market indexes
Common and preferred stock
Common stock:
basic ownership claim on a corporation
has right to vote on:
electing BOD
capital budgeting
proposed mergers and acquisitions
Preferred:
no voting right
quite similar to Corporate Bond, hybrid-instructment (both debt and equity)
dividends are due regardless of earnings
frequently has a credit rating
maybe convertible or callable
Common stock valuation:
A One-period model:
assume stock is bought today and sold 1 year later
P0=1+RD1+P1
R: discount rate, required rate of return, not market rate for similar stock
P0=t=1∑∞(1+R)tDt where R is required rate of return
doesnt yet account for selling stock
only for dividend forecasts
doesnt include assumptions:
growth rate is constant
forecasting dividends or when shares are sold
Growth stock pricing paradox
stock of a company whose earnings are growing at an above-average rate and are expected to continue to do so for some time
Rapidly-growing firms
Typically pay no dividends on common stock in the growth phase
Have many high-return investment opportunities, making investors are better off if firms reinvest earnings
shares of a company that will never pay cash to investors are worthless
In reality, high-growth firms will eventually pay dividends
If investments made with reinvested funds succeed, a firm’s net cash inflows should increase significantly and investors can sell their stock at a much higher price than what they paid
Stock valuation: some simplifying assumptions
These apply for both common stock and preferred stock
Zero-growth dividend model:
P0=RD
Constant growth dividend model:
Dt=D0×(1+g)t
P0=R−gD1 where D1 is dividend in year 1
Computing future stock prices:
Pt=R−gDt+1
Mixed (supernormal) growth dividend model:
If the supernormal growth occurs first and is followed by constant dividend growth, we can combine equations