Corporate Finance

2017-06-12  本文已影响0人  cyz1990

Corporate Finance

[TOC]

Corporate Government

shareholder theory: maximize the market value of the firm's common equity

stakeholder theory: considers the interest of other stakeholders

Stakeholders

  1. shareholders
  2. creditors
  3. managers and employees
  4. board of directors
  5. customers
  6. suppliers
  7. governments/regulators

Principle-Agent Relationship

  1. shareholder and manger/director relationships
  2. controlling and minority shareholder relationships
  3. manager and board relationships
  4. shareholder v.s. creditor interests
  5. conflict between customers and shareholders
  6. conflict between customers and suppliers
  7. conflict between shareholders and governments/regulators

Stakeholder Management

  1. legal infrastructure
    • employee laws
  2. governmental organizational
    • comprise the regulation to which companies are subject
  3. contractual infrastructure
    • contractual agreement with creditors
    • contractual agreement with customers and suppliers
    • employee contract
  4. organizational infrastructure--a company's corporate governance procedures
    • annual meeting
    • board of directors
    • the audit function
    • reporting and transparency
    • policies on related-party transactions
    • remuneration policies
    • say on pay--enables shareholders to vote on executive renumeration matters
annual meeting
board of directors

board structure

board responsibilities

board committees

Factors Affecting Stakeholder Relationships and Corporate Governance

Market Factors

Non-Market Factors

Considerations in Corporate Governance

  1. company ownership and voting structure
    • have dual class structure
  2. composition of a company's board
    • directors are involved in related-party transactions with company
    • have served for many years and may have become too close to the company抯
      management
  3. management incentives and remuneration
    • offer greater incentives, paid in cash, to achieve short-term goals
    • performance-based incentive pay is stable over time
    • management remuneration is high compared with the industry
  4. composition of shareholders
  5. relative strength of shareholders' rights
  6. management of long-term risks

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG)

ESG investing:

  1. positive screening
  2. negative screening
  3. impact investing
  4. thematic investing

Capital Budgeting

The Capital Budgeting Process

  1. Idea generation
  2. Analyzing project proposals
  3. Create the firm-wide capital budget
  4. Monitoring decisions and conducting a post-audit

Categories of Capital Budgeting Projects

  1. replacement projects to maintain the business
  2. replacement projects for cost reduction
  3. expansion projects
  4. new products or market development
  5. mandatory projects
  6. other projects

Principles of Capital Budgeting

  1. Decisions are based on cash flows, not accounting income
    • incremental cash flows--the changes in cash flows that will occur if the project is undertaken
    • sunk costs should not be included in the analysis
    • externalities
      • cannibalization--a new project takes sales from an existing product
  2. Cash flows are based on opportunity costs
  3. The timing of cash flows is important
  4. Cash flows are analyzed on an after-tax basis
  5. Financing costs are reflected in the project's required rate of return

project interaction

Investment Decision Criteria

  1. Net Present Value

    NPV profile

    ![](pictures/NPV profile.png)

  2. Internal Interest Rate

    • multiple IRR or No IRR problem
  3. Payback Period--the number of years to recover the original investment

    • a measure of payback but not a measure of profitability
    • it does not take into account the time value of money
  4. Discounted Payback Period--uses the present values of the project's estimated cash flows

  5. Profitability Index

$$
PI=\frac{PV\ of\ future\ cash\ flows}{CF_0}=1+\frac{NPV}{CF_0}
$$

Cost of Capital

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