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Finance Midterm

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views14 pages

Finance Midterm

Uploaded by

vinaykannikal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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UNIT – 1

SHORT-TERM FINANCING AND PLANNING

a) Tracing Cash and Net Working Capital

Understanding cash flow and net working capital is crucial for managing short-term finances
effectively. Cash flow analysis tracks the movement of cash in and out of the business, while net
working capital assesses the liquidity and operational efficiency by comparing current assets and
liabilities.

b) Defining Cash in Terms of Other Elements

Cash is not just physical currency but includes liquid assets that can be readily converted into cash.
These assets include cash equivalents such as short-term investments and marketable securities,
which are essential for maintaining liquidity.

c) The Operating Cycle and the Cash Cycle

The operating cycle represents the time it takes to convert inventory into cash, while the cash cycle
adds the time it takes to collect accounts receivable. Understanding these cycles helps in managing
cash flows efficiently by optimizing inventory levels and credit terms.

d) Some Aspects of Short-Term Financial Policy

Short-term financial policies outline strategies for managing current assets and liabilities to ensure
liquidity and operational stability. Key aspects include managing cash, accounts receivable, inventory,
and short-term debt effectively.

e) Cash Budgeting

Cash budgeting involves forecasting cash inflows and outflows over a specific period. It helps
businesses plan for short-term financing needs, allocate resources effectively, and ensure sufficient
cash reserves to meet obligations and investments.

f) The Short-Term Financial Plans

Developing comprehensive short-term financial plans involves setting goals, strategies, and actions to
manage cash flows, working capital, and financial obligations. These plans adapt to the dynamic
business environment and regulatory changes.

g) The Short-Term Financial Plans in India

In the Indian context, short-term financial planning integrates local economic conditions, regulatory
requirements, and market dynamics. It emphasizes managing currency fluctuations, interest rates,
and compliance with Reserve Bank of India guidelines for short-term borrowing and investments.
UNIT – 2

CASH AND INVENTORY MANAGEMENT & RECEIVABLES MANAGEMENT

a) Reasons for Holding Cash

Businesses hold cash for several key reasons:

• Transactional Motive: To meet day-to-day operational expenses such as salaries, rent, and
supplier payments.

• Precautionary Motive: To safeguard against unforeseen expenses or delays in receivables.

• Speculative Motive: To seize unexpected investment opportunities.

• Compensating Balance: To maintain required minimum balances with banks, often tied to
loan agreements or banking services.

b) Determining the Target Cash Balance

The optimal cash balance is the amount that minimizes the total cost of holding and managing cash.
Tools such as the Baumol Model (economic order quantity approach for cash) and the Miller-Orr
Model (for fluctuating cash flows) help determine this. The goal is to balance between liquidity
(having enough cash) and profitability (not keeping too much idle cash).

c) Managing the Collection

Efficient collection of receivables ensures steady cash inflow. Strategies include:

• Setting clear credit terms.

• Prompt invoicing and follow-up.

• Offering early payment discounts.

• Using electronic payment systems to reduce delays.

• Regular monitoring of aging schedules to identify overdue accounts.

d) Investing Idle Cash

Idle cash that exceeds operational needs should be temporarily invested to earn returns. Options
include:

• Treasury bills

• Certificates of deposit

• Money market funds

• Commercial papers
The key is safety, liquidity, and reasonable return, given the short investment horizon.

e) Need to Hold Inventory

Inventory is held to:


• Ensure uninterrupted production and sales.

• Take advantage of bulk purchase discounts.

• Protect against market fluctuations and demand uncertainty.

• Allow flexibility in operations and customer service.


However, excessive inventory ties up capital and increases holding costs.

f) Inventory Management Techniques

Efficient inventory management reduces costs and improves service levels. Common techniques
include:

• Economic Order Quantity (EOQ): Optimal order quantity that minimizes total inventory
costs.

• Just-in-Time (JIT): Reduces inventory by synchronizing production with demand.

• ABC Analysis: Classifies inventory based on value and importance (A = high value, C = low
value).

• Reorder Point System: Orders are placed when stock reaches a minimum level.

• Safety Stock: Buffer stock maintained to handle demand or supply fluctuations.

g) Terms of the Sale

Terms of sale define the payment structure between buyer and seller. Key components:

• Credit Period (e.g., 30 days)

• Cash Discount (e.g., 2/10, net 30 – 2% discount if paid in 10 days)

• Due Date and Interest on Overdue Payments


Clear and favorable terms encourage timely payments and improve cash flow.

h) The Decision to Grant Credit: Risk and Information

Granting credit involves analyzing:

• Creditworthiness of the customer.

• Financial health, payment history, and reputation.

• External credit reports (e.g., CIBIL, CRISIL in India).


The goal is to balance sales growth with the risk of non-payment. Tools like the 5Cs of credit
(Character, Capacity, Capital, Collateral, Conditions) help in evaluation.

i) Optimal Credit Policy

An optimal credit policy aims to:

• Maximize sales without excessive risk.

• Minimize bad debts and collection costs.


• Align with the company’s liquidity needs.
It involves deciding how liberal or conservative the company should be in offering credit,
based on its business model and risk appetite.

j) Credit Analysis

This is the process of evaluating a customer’s ability and willingness to pay. Techniques include:

• Financial statement analysis

• Credit scoring models

• Reference checks and trade history


Effective credit analysis ensures only creditworthy customers are extended credit, thus
reducing the risk of default.

k) Collection Policy

A collection policy outlines how the firm will follow up on receivables. A good policy:

• Defines when to contact overdue accounts.

• Establishes escalation steps (reminders, calls, legal action).

• Includes incentives for early payment and penalties for delay.


A strict but fair collection policy improves cash flow and reduces bad debts.
UNIT 3.1

a) Financial Institutions, Markets, and Instruments

1. Financial Institutions

Financial institutions are intermediaries that mobilize savings from surplus sectors and channel them
into deficit sectors, facilitating economic growth and financial stability.

Types of Financial Institutions:

• Commercial Banks: Accept deposits, provide loans, and offer financial services.

• Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs): Offer financial services but do not hold a
banking license.

• Development Financial Institutions (DFIs): Focus on funding industrial and infrastructural


development (e.g., SIDBI, NABARD).

• Insurance Companies: Provide risk coverage and investment opportunities.

• Mutual Funds: Pool funds from investors to invest in diversified portfolios.

• Pension Funds: Collect retirement savings and invest them for long-term returns.

These institutions help in capital formation, credit allocation, and financial inclusion.

2. Financial Markets

Financial markets are platforms where financial instruments are traded. They facilitate the buying
and selling of assets such as stocks, bonds, currencies, and derivatives.

Types of Financial Markets:

• Money Market: Deals with short-term instruments (less than one year), e.g., Treasury Bills,
Commercial Papers.

• Capital Market: Long-term funding through equity and debt instruments.

o Primary Market: New securities are issued to investors (IPO).

o Secondary Market: Existing securities are traded (Stock Exchanges like NSE, BSE).

• Foreign Exchange Market (Forex): Deals with currency trading.

• Derivatives Market: Forwards, futures, options, and swaps used for hedging and speculation.

Financial markets ensure liquidity, price discovery, and efficient allocation of capital.

3. Financial Instruments

Financial instruments are assets that can be traded. They represent a claim on future cash flows or
ownership.

Broad Classification:
• Equity Instruments: Represent ownership in a company (e.g., common shares, preferred
shares).

• Debt Instruments: Represent a loan made by an investor (e.g., bonds, debentures).

• Hybrid Instruments: Combine features of debt and equity (e.g., convertible debentures).

• Derivatives: Contracts deriving value from an underlying asset (e.g., futures, options, swaps).

• Money Market Instruments: Short-term, low-risk, and highly liquid (e.g., Treasury Bills,
Certificates of Deposit).

These instruments enable businesses to raise funds, investors to earn returns, and the economy to
function smoothly.
UNIT 3.2

OVERVIEW OF THE INDIAN FINANCIAL SYSTEM

The Indian Financial System is a well-structured network of financial institutions, markets,


instruments, and services that facilitates the flow of funds in the economy.

Components:

1. Financial Institutions: Includes RBI, SEBI, commercial banks, NBFCs, insurance companies,
and mutual funds.

2. Financial Markets: Comprise the money market and capital market, where short- and long-
term financial instruments are traded.

3. Financial Instruments: Include equity shares, debentures, bonds, treasury bills, commercial
papers, etc.

4. Financial Services: Cover activities like fund management, leasing, credit rating, and
investment advisory.

The Indian system has evolved post-liberalization (1991), adopting modern practices like electronic
trading, digital banking, and regulatory reforms that enhanced transparency, inclusiveness, and
growth.

Can Financing Decisions Create Value?

Yes, financing decisions can create or destroy value for a firm.

• Choosing the right mix of debt and equity (capital structure) affects the cost of capital and
shareholder value.

• Tax advantages of debt (interest tax shield) can enhance value.

• Over-leverage, however, increases financial risk and can erode investor confidence.

• Timing and source of financing (e.g., issuing equity when stock prices are high) can also
influence firm value.

Smart financing aligns with business strategy, lowers capital costs, and improves the firm's valuation
in the long run.

Efficient Capital Markets – Description

An Efficient Capital Market (ECM) is one in which security prices fully reflect all available information
at any point in time.

Characteristics:

• No investor consistently earns excess returns.

• Prices adjust quickly to new information.

• Resources are allocated optimally.


The ECM hypothesis (EMH), proposed by Eugene Fama, suggests that stocks always trade at fair
value, making it impossible to "beat the market" consistently on a risk-adjusted basis.

Different Types of Market Efficiency

1. Weak-form Efficiency: Prices reflect all past trading data (e.g., prices, volume).

o Implication: Technical analysis cannot generate excess returns.

2. Semi-strong-form Efficiency: Prices reflect all publicly available information.

o Implication: Fundamental analysis is ineffective for beating the market.

3. Strong-form Efficiency: Prices reflect all public and private (insider) information.

o Implication: Even insider trading doesn’t help earn abnormal returns.

The Evidence

Empirical studies offer mixed support:

• Weak-form efficiency is generally observed in developed markets.

• Semi-strong evidence is stronger in mature economies but weaker in emerging markets like
India.

• Strong-form efficiency rarely holds due to insider advantages and regulatory gaps.

Behavioural Challenge to Market Efficiency

Behavioural finance argues that investor psychology can cause systematic errors in judgment,
leading to market inefficiencies.

Examples:

• Overconfidence and herding behavior drive bubbles and crashes.

• Loss aversion, anchoring, and confirmation bias lead to irrational investment choices.

• Real-life cases: Dotcom bubble, 2008 crash, GameStop short squeeze.

Such anomalies challenge the assumption that all investors are rational.

Empirical Challenge to Market Efficiency

Empirical studies show that:

• Momentum investing (buying rising stocks) can beat the market in the short term.

• Value stocks outperform growth stocks over the long run.

• Calendar effects like the January effect contradict EMH.


• In India, information asymmetry, low retail investor awareness, and market manipulation
sometimes prevent full efficiency.

Reviewing the Differences

Aspect Efficient Market Hypothesis Behavioural Finance


(EMH)
Assumption Rational investors Psychological biases affect
decisions
Price reflection Reflects all available information May deviate from true value
Investment strategy Passive investing is optimal Opportunities for active strategies
utility
Empirical support Partial Growing evidence in real markets

Implications for Corporate Finance

• Firms must assume that their financing and investment decisions will be closely analyzed
and reflected in stock prices.

• Good governance, transparency, and strategic communication can improve market


perception.

• Market efficiency influences capital budgeting—firms must consider market signals while
evaluating new projects.

• Behavioural finance insights help understand investor reactions, aiding better IPO timing,
dividend decisions, and share buybacks.

Ratio Analysis

Ratio Analysis is a key tool for evaluating a firm's financial health and performance using numerical
relationships between financial statement items.

Categories:

1. Liquidity Ratios:

o Current Ratio, Quick Ratio – measure short-term solvency.

2. Profitability Ratios:

o Net Profit Margin, Return on Equity (ROE), Return on Assets (ROA).

3. Leverage Ratios:

o Debt-Equity Ratio, Interest Coverage Ratio – assess financial risk.

4. Efficiency Ratios:

o Inventory Turnover, Receivables Turnover – evaluate asset use.

5. Market Value Ratios:


o Earnings Per Share (EPS), P/E Ratio, Market-to-Book Ratio.

Importance:

• Helps in trend analysis, inter-firm comparison, and investment decision-making.

• Also used by lenders, investors, and analysts to assess risk and returns.
UNIT 3.3

THE CAPITAL STRUCTURE

Capital structure refers to the mix of debt and equity a firm uses to finance its operations and
growth. An optimal capital structure minimizes the cost of capital and maximizes firm value.

1. The Capital Structure Question

The core question is:

What is the optimal combination of debt and equity that maximizes a firm’s value and minimizes its
overall cost of capital?

Too much debt increases financial risk, while too little debt may result in missed tax benefits and
underutilization of leverage. Finding the right balance is essential for long-term value creation.

2. The Pecking Order Theory

This theory, proposed by Myers and Majluf, suggests firms follow a hierarchy when choosing
financing:

1. Internal funds (retained earnings)

2. Debt

3. Equity (as a last resort)

Why?
Issuing equity may signal to investors that the stock is overvalued, leading to adverse reactions. Thus,
firms prefer to finance with less visible and less sensitive sources.

3. Cost of Financial Distress

While debt has tax advantages, excessive borrowing can lead to financial distress, which has costs
such as:

• Bankruptcy costs (legal, administrative)

• Loss of customer and supplier confidence

• Reduced employee morale and productivity

• Higher cost of capital due to increased risk

These implicit and explicit costs reduce the benefits of debt.

4. Signaling

Firms convey information to investors through financing choices. For example:


• Issuing debt may signal confidence in future cash flows (positive signal).

• Issuing equity may signal overvaluation or lack of internal funds (negative signal).

Thus, financial decisions serve as signals about management’s private information and expectations.

5. Maximizing Firm Value vs. Maximizing Stockholders' Interests

• Maximizing firm value focuses on increasing total enterprise value (both debt and equity).

• Maximizing shareholders’ interests may sometimes encourage risky decisions that benefit
equity holders at the cost of debtholders (e.g., taking on more debt or risk).

The goal should be value maximization with stakeholder balance to ensure sustainable growth.

6. Financial Leverage and Firm Value: An Example

Suppose two identical firms:

• Firm A is unleveraged (all equity-financed)

• Firm B is leveraged (uses debt)

If Firm B earns a higher return on capital than the interest on debt, it increases earnings per share
(EPS) and return on equity (ROE), boosting value for equity holders—this is the leverage benefit.

However, increased debt also raises financial risk, potentially reducing the firm’s overall market value
if overused.

7. Modigliani and Miller Proposition II (With Taxes)

M&M Proposition II (1963) states:

The value of a firm increases with leverage because interest is tax-deductible.

Formula:

Cost of Equity (Re) = Ra + (Ra - Rd) × (D/E)


Where:

• Ra = cost of capital if all-equity financed

• Rd = cost of debt

• D/E = debt-to-equity ratio

The proposition shows that as debt increases, equity becomes riskier, so Re increases, but the
overall WACC may decline due to the tax shield on interest.

8. Growth and Debt-Equity Ratio

Firms with high growth opportunities prefer lower debt because:


• Debt adds fixed obligations, which may constrain reinvestment.

• Investors may penalize high-debt firms in dynamic industries.

• Growth firms may prefer retained earnings to maintain financial flexibility.

In contrast, mature firms with stable cash flows may use more debt to enhance returns.

9. How Firms Establish Capital Structure

There is no “one-size-fits-all” method, but firms consider:

• Industry norms

• Business risk and cash flow stability

• Tax implications

• Market conditions and investor expectations

• Regulatory and legal constraints

Often, firms adjust gradually, targeting an optimal range rather than a fixed number.

10. Shirking, Perquisites, and Bad Investments: Agency Cost of Equity

Agency costs arise when managers (agents) do not act in the best interest of shareholders (owners).

Examples:

• Shirking: Managers avoid effort or responsibility.

• Perquisites: Unnecessary benefits (lavish offices, travel).

• Over-investment: Funding unprofitable projects for personal glory or expansion.

High equity ownership by managers or effective governance mechanisms can reduce such agency
problems. These costs must be factored into capital structure decisions, as diluting ownership can
worsen agency conflicts.

Conclusion

Capital structure decisions involve balancing:

• Tax benefits of debt

• Costs of financial distress

• Signaling effects

• Agency issues

• Growth opportunities
By analyzing these factors, firms can craft a strategy that maximizes firm value, manages risks, and
aligns stakeholder interests.

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