Financial Management Handout
Financial Management Handout
Financial Management Handout
Financial Statements Analysis involves careful selection of data from financial statements in order to assess and
evaluate the firm’s past performance, its present obligation, and future business potentials.
Financial statement analysis is the process of analyzing a company's financial statements for decision-making
purposes. External stakeholders use it to understand the overall health of an organization as well as to evaluate
financial performance and business value. Internal constituents use it as a monitoring tool for managing the
finances.
OPERATING EXPENSES:
350/3,280 = 10.67%
SELLING ADMINISTRATIVE:
420/3280 = 12.80%
TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES: (NET INCOME FROM OPERATION / EARNINGS BEFRORE INTEREST AND TAXES)
390/3280 = 11.90%
INTEREST EXPENSE:
30/3280 = 0.9%
INCOME TAX:
126/3280 = 3.84%
NET INCOME:
234/3280 = 7.13%
3. Ratio Analysis
Ratios are calculated from the financial statements to provide users of such statements with relevant
information about the firm’s liquidity, use of leverage, asset management, cost control, profitability,
growth, and valuation.
A. Liquidity Ratios – provide information about the firm’s ability to pay its current obligations and
continue operations. Measures the short-term debt paying ability.
-As leverage increases, the risk borne by creditors, as well as the risk that the firm may not be able to
meet its maturing obligations, increases.
-Since interest expense is tax deductible, leverage increases the company’s return when it is profitable.
**Solvency is the ability of a company to meet its long-term debts and financial obligations.
Solvency can be an important measure of financial health, since its one way of demonstrating a
company’s ability to manage its operations into the foreseeable future. (GOAL CONCERN
ASSUMPTION)
C. Cost Management Ratios- measure how well a firm controls its costs.
D. Profitability Ratios –
measures earnings in
relation to some base,
such as assets, sales, or
capital.
CCH Corporation Statement of
Financial Position
E. Solvency Ratios-
measures of the ability
of the enterprise to
surviveover a long
period of time.
Year 2 Year 1
Cash 140 130
AR 160 140
Inventory 170 150
Prepaid Expense 90 90
Total Current Assets 560 510
Current Liabilities Accounts
Payable 150 150
Accrued Liabilities 60 60
Notes Payable 60 60
Total Current Liabilities 270 270
FORMULA:
YEAR 2: YEAR 1:
YEAR 2: YEAR 1:
Problem 2
You are given an excerpt from the Financial Statement of Do-Turtle Corp. for the year ended 2020. As the Accounting manager of
the company, you are tasked by the CEO to determine the following:
Sales 500,000.00
Cost of Goods Sold (LESS) (200,000.00)
Gross Margin 300,000.00
Selling & Administrative
Expenses (LESS) (50,000.00)
The beginning balance of total assets was P650,000 and the ending balance was P580,000. As the consultant of
MokaPeyk News, what is the return on total assets (RoA)?
Interest rate or the required rate of return represents the cost of money.
Interest rate is usually applied to debt instruments such as bonds and bank loans.
Required rate of Return is usually applied to equity investments such as common stock capital (ordinary share
capital)
1. Inflation:
Sources: 1
Fundamentals of Financial Management by Brigham and Houston 13th Edition
Financial Management by Gitman
Basic Finance by Besley and Brigham 2013-2015 Edition
CCH
A rising trend in prices of goods and services. Typically, savers demand higher interest
returns (interest rates) when inflation is high because they want their investments to
more than keep pace with the rising prices.
2. Risk:
When people perceive that a particular investment is riskier, they will expect a higher return on that
investment as compensation for bearing the risk.
**Risk: In financial market context, the chance that a financial asset will bot earn the
return promised.
4. Production Opportunity
The higher the expected return on the investment would be, the more the investor could
afford to offer potential investors their savings.
Real Rate of Interest – Rate that creates equilibrium between the supply of savings and the demand for
investment funds in a perfect world, without inflation, where suppliers and demanders of funds have no liquidity
preferences and there is no risk.
The nominal rate of interest differs from the real rate of interest, r*, as a result of two factors, inflation and risk.
When people save money and save it, they are sacrificing consumption today (that is, they are spending less than
they could) in return for higher future consumption. When
Sources: 2
Fundamentals of Financial Management by Brigham and Houston 13th Edition
Financial Management by Gitman
Basic Finance by Besley and Brigham 2013-2015 Edition
investors expect inflation to occur, they believe that the price of consuming goods and services will be higher in
the future than in the present.
When investors expect inflation to occur, they believe that the price of consuming goods and services will be
higher in the future than the present. Therefore, they will be reluctant to sacrifice today’s consumption unless the
return they can earn on the money they save (or invest) will be high enough to allow them to purchase the
goods and services they desire at higher future price.
(Meaning, Investors will require higher nominal rate of return if they expect inflation, the
higher rate of return is called INFLATION PREMIUM{IP})
Similarly, investors generally demand higher rates of return on risky investment as compared to
safe ones. Otherwise, there is little incentive for investors to bear the additional risk. Therefore,
investors will demand a higher nominal rate of return in risky investment. This additional rate
of return is called the RISK PREMIUM{RP}
R1= R* + IP + RP1
NOMINAL INTEREST = NOMINAL RATE + INFLATION PREMIUM + RISK PREMIUM
Illustrative Problems:
Candy Corporation has a budget of P100,000 to buy its premium candies which are to be resold to its consumers.
Candy Corporation’s supplier offers them a price of 25 pesos for each candy. The accounting manager currently
ponders if he is to invest the P100,000 on a 1-year deposit, it will earn 7%. The current inflation rate is 4%.
Questions:
1. How many candies should Candy Corporation buy, if the accounting manager decides
not to invest the P100,000?
100,000 / 25 = 4,000
2. How much would Candy Corporation earn if the accounting manager opted to save the
P100,000 in the company’s deposit for a year?
25 x 1.04 = 26
4. How much would be the effect of the inflation to the candies’ cost?
Expectations Theory
- Suggests that the yield curve reflects investor expectations about future interest
rates. According to this theory, when investors expect short-term interest rates to
rise in the future (perhaps because investors believe that inflation will rise in the
future), today’s long-term rates will be higher than current short-term rates, and
the yield curve will be upward sloping. The opposite is true when investors expect
declining short-term rates- today’s short-term rates will be higher than current
long-term rates, and the yield curve will be inverted.
R1= r* + IP +RP1
RP1 – the risk premium consists of a number of issuer and issue related components, including business
risk, financial risk, interest rate risk, liquidity risk, and tax risk, as well as the purely debt-specific risks-
default risk, maturity risk and contractual provision risk.
In general, the highest risk premiums and therefore the highest returns result from securities issued by
firms with a high risk of default and from long-term maturities that have unfavorable contractual
provisions.
Default Risk – The possibility that the issuer of debt will not pay the contractual interest or principal as
scheduled. The greater the uncertainty as to the borrower’s ability to meet these payments, the greater
the risk premium. High bond ratings reflect low default risk, and low bond ratings reflect high default risk.
Maturity Risk – the fact that longer the maturity, the more the value of a security will change in response
to a given change in interest rates. If the interest rates on otherwise similar-risk securities suddenly rise as
a result of a change in the money supply, the prices of long-term bonds will decline by more than the
prices of short-term bonds, and vice- versa.
Contractual Provision Risk – Conditions that are often included in a debt agreement or a stock issue.
Some of theses reduce risk, whereas others may increase risk. For example, a provision allowing a bond
issuer to retire its bonds prior to their maturity under favorable terms increases the bond’s risk.
d. One of the advantages of a corporation from a social standpoint is that every stockholder has equal
voting rights, i.e., “one person, one vote.”
e. Corporations of all types are subject to the corporate income tax.
2. Which of the
conflicts of following actions would be most likely to reduce potential interest between
a. Pay managers stockholders and managers?
large cash salaries and give them no stock options.
b.
3. Which of the following actions would be most likely to reduce potential conflicts of interest between
stockholders and bondholders?
a. Compensating managers with stock options.
b. Financing risky projects with additional debt.
C. The threat of hostile takeovers.
d.
e. Abolishing the Security and Exchange Commission.
5. Which of the following could explain why a business might choose to organize as a
corporation rather than as a sole proprietorship or a partnership?
a. Corporations generally face fewer regulations.
b. Corporations generally face lower taxes.
d. Corporations enjoy unlimited liability.
e. Statements c and d are correct.
CORRECT: CORPORATIONS GENERALLY FIND IT EASIER TO RAISE CAPITAL
e. Although stockholders of the corporation are insulated by limited legal liability, the legal status of the
corporation does not protect the firm’s managers in the same way.
8. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. The optimal dividend policy is the one that satisfies the shareholders because they supply the firm’s capital.
b. The use of debt financing has no effect on cash flow or stock price.
C. THE RISKINESS OF PROJECTED CASH FLOWS DEPENDS UPON HOW THE FILM IS FINANCED
d. Stock price is dependent on the projected cash flows and the use of debt, but not on the timing of the cash flow
stream.
e. Dividend policy is one aspect of the firm’s financial policy that is determined directly by the shareholders.
d. An agency relationship exists when one or more persons hire another person to
perform some service but withhold decision-making authority from that person.
e. None of the statements above is correct.
10. Which of the following statements is most correct?
a. One of the ways in which firms can mitigate or reduce agency problems between bondholders and
stockholders is by increasing the amount of debt in the capital structure.
b. The threat of takeover is one way in which the agency problem between stockholders and managers can be
alleviated.
c. Managerial compensation can be structured to reduce agency problems between stockholders and
managers.
d. STATEMENTS B AND C ARE CORRECT
e. All of the statements above are correct.
11. ARCY CORP’S CURRENT RATIO IS 0.5, WHILE SARSI COMPANY’S CURRENT RATIO IS 1.5. BOTH FIRMS WANT TO “WINDOW
DRESS”
Quiz 2 - Stocks and Bond Valuation 10/6/21, 4:02 PM
! Students have either already taken or started taking this quiz, so be careful about editing
it. If you change any quiz questions in a significant way, you may want to consider regrading
students who took the old version of the quiz.
Details Questions
# Question 2 pts
$%
1. The Jones Company has decided to undertake a large project. Consequently, there is a
need for additional funds. The financial manager plans to issue preferred stock with a
perpetual annual dividend of $10 per share and a par value of $30. If the required return
on this stock is currently 20 percent, what should be the stock’s market value?
$150
$100
Correct Answer $ 50
$ 25
$ 10
# Question 2 pts
Johnston Corporation is growing at a constant rate of 6 percent per year. It has both common
stock and non-participating preferred stock outstanding. The cost of preferred stock (kp) is 20
percent. The par value of the preferred stock is $120, and the stock has a stated dividend of
10 percent of par. What is the market value of the preferred stock?
$125
$175
$150
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 1 of 9
$200
# Question 2 pts
A share of preferred stock pays a dividend of $0.50 each quarter. If you are willing to pay
$100.00 for this preferred stock, what is your nominal (not effective) annual rate of return?
10%
8%
Correct Answer 2%
12%
14%
# Question 2 pts
Assume that you plan to buy a share of XYZ stock today and to hold it for 2 years. Your
expectations are that you will not receive a dividend at the end of Year 1, but you will receive a
dividend of $9.25 at the end of Year 2. In addition, you expect to sell the stock for $150 at the
end of Year 2. If your expected rate of return is 16 percent, how much should you be willing to
pay for this stock today?
$164.19
$ 75.29
$118.35
$131.74
# Question 2 pts
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 2 of 9
Quiz 2 - Stocks and Bond Valuation 10/6/21, 4:02 PM
Assume that the average firm in your company’s industry is expected to grow at a constant rate of
5 percent, and its dividend yield is 4 percent. Your company is about as risky as the average firm
in the industry, but it has just developed a line of innovative new products, which leads you to
expect that its earnings and dividends will grow at a rate of 40 percent (D1 = D0(1.40)) this year
and 25 percent the following year after which growth should match the 5 percent industry average
rate. The last dividend paid (D0) was $2. What is the stock’s value per share?
$ 42.60
$ 91.88
$101.15
$110.37
# Question 2 pts
Lamonica Motors just reported earnings per share of $2.00. The stock has a price earnings
ratio of 40, so the stock’s current price is $80 per share. Analysts expect that one year from
now the company will have an EPS of $2.40, and it will pay its first dividend of $1.00 per
share.
The stock has a required return of 10 percent. What price earnings ratio must the stock have
one year from now so that investors realize their expected return?
44.00
4.17
40.00
36.67
# Question 2 pts
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 3 of 9
Quiz 2 - Stocks and Bond Valuation 10/6/21, 4:02 PM
Newburn Entertainment’s stock is expected to pay a year-end dividend of $3.00 a share (D1 =
$3.00). The stock’s dividend is expected to grow at a constant rate of 5 percent a year. The risk-
free rate, kRF, is 6 percent and the market risk premium, (kM – kRF), is 5 percent.
The stock has a beta of 0.8. What is the stock’s expected price five years from now?
$60.00
$96.63
$72.11
$68.96
# Question 2 pts
You have been given the following projections for Cali Corporation for the coming year.
Beta = 1.4.
kRF = 5%.
kM = 9%.
$46.27
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 4 of 9
$53.72
# Question 2 pts
An annual coupon bond with a $1,000 face value matures in 10 years. The bond currently sells
for $903.7351 and has a 9 percent yield to maturity. What is the bond’s annual coupon rate?
6.7%
7.0%
7.2%
# Question 2 pts
A 12-year bond has a 9 percent annual coupon, a yield to maturity of 8 percent, and a face
value of $1,000. What is the price of the bond?
1,469
1,000
928
1,957
# Question 2 pts
Palmer Products has outstanding bonds with an annual 8 percent coupon. The bonds have a
par value of $1,000 and a price of $865. The bonds will mature in 11 years. What is the yield to
maturity on the bonds?
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 5 of 9
11.13%
9.25%
8.00%
9.89%
# Question 2 pts
A corporate bond has a face value of $1,000, and pays a $50 coupon every six months (that
is, the bond has a 10 percent semiannual coupon). The bond matures in 12 years and sells at
a price of $1,080. What is the bond’s nominal yield to maturity?
8.28%
8.65%
9.31%
10.78%
# Question 2 pts
A bond matures in 12 years and pays an 8 percent annual coupon. The bond has a face value
of $1,000 and currently sells for $985. What is the bond’s current yield and yield to maturity?
# Question 2 pts
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 6 of 9
A bond with a face value of $1,000 matures in 12 years and has a 9 percent semiannual
coupon. (That is, the bond pays a $45 coupon every six months.) The bond has a nominal
yield to maturity of 7.5 percent, and it can be called in 4 years at a call price of $1,045. What is
the bond’s nominal yield to call?
11.36%
3.31%
9.98%
5.68%
# Question 2 pts
A corporate bond that matures in 12 years pays a 9 percent annual coupon, has a face value
of $1,000, and a yield to maturity of 7.5 percent. The bond can first be called four years from
now. The call price is $1,050. What is the bond’s yield to call?
7.10%
7.50%
11.86%
# Question 1 pts
One of the basic relationships in interest rate theory is that, other things held constant, for a
given change in the required rate of return, the the time to maturity, the the change in price.
a. longer; smaller.
b. shorter; larger.
c. longer; greater.
d. shorter; smaller.
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 7 of 9
# Question 1 pts
All else equal, long-term bonds have more interest rate risk than short-term bonds.
All else equal, high-coupon bonds have more reinvestment rate risk than low-coupon
bonds.
All else equal, short-term bonds have more reinvestment rate risk than do long-term
bonds.
# Question 1 pts
Which of the following events would make it more likely that a company would choose to call
its outstanding callable bonds?
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 8 of 9
Other things held constant, if a bond indenture contains a call provision, the yield to maturity that
would exist without such a call provision will generally be the YTM with a call provision.
Higher than.
The same as
# Question 1 pts
Correct Answer All else equal, if a bond’s yield to maturity increases, its price will fall.
All else equal, if a bond’s yield to maturity increases, its current yield will fall.
If a bond’s yield to maturity exceeds the coupon rate, the bond will sell at a premium
over par.
& New Question & New Question Group ' Find Questions
https://feuph.instructure.com/courses/2343/quizzes/18244/edit Page 9 of 9