FIN 303 Chap 1 Spring 2010
FIN 303 Chap 1 Spring 2010
FIN 303 Chap 1 Spring 2010
Management
What are 3 “forms” that businesses can take?
What are the objectives of these different business
forms?
What does “maximization of shareholder wealth” mean?
How do a company’s “ethics” affect shareholder wealth?
How do we measure shareholder wealth?
What are agency conflicts between managers and
shareholders?
What are some recent trends that affect businesses?
What do financial managers do within businesses?
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What are 3 “forms” that businesses can take?
Sole proprietorship
Text: “An unincorporated business owned by one individual.”
Congratulations! It’s all up to you!
Partnership
Text: “An unincorporated business owned by 2 or more.”
Congratulations! It’s all up to you and your partners!
Corporation
Text: “A legal entity created by a state, separate from its
owners and managers.”
Example: GE has 100s of thousands of owners and managers.
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Sole Proprietorships and Partnerships
Advantages (versus Corporations)
Easier and cheaper to form
Fewer government regulations
Lower income tax rate
You are your own boss
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Corporations
Advantages (versus Proprietorships and Partnerships)
Liability is limited to what you paid for your shares
Easier to borrow money (“raise capital”)
Easy to transfer ownership (e.g., stock markets)
Distinct from its owners and managers (“unlimited life”)
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What are the objectives of businesses?
Proprietorships and Partnerships
Why might you want to start or own a business?
Corporations
Who owns the corporation?
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What factors affect stock prices?
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28773170/
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What is “maximization of shareholder wealth”?
Make the company’s stock price as high as possible!
When?
Short term versus long term decisions
Chevron Example
Investment of $2 billion in offshore oil exploration vs.
alternative shale oil research
What about risk?
We’ll talk a lot about different types of risk this semester.
Here’s one example: Suppose you buy stock in Wells Fargo
because they pay a steady dividend ----- what happens if
they cut the dividend?
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Los Angeles Times article:
January 21, 2009|Tom Petruno
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-wells21-2009jan21,0,5780813.story
[Please note – this was one year ago. Wells Fargo cut dividend from
$1.36/shares to $0.20/share. Price now? Check out ticker symbol
WFC at finance.yahoo.com or finance.google.com.]
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What factors affect stock prices? (cont’d)
How certain are the cash flows – what is the “risk” that
they will not occur or be smaller or larger than expected?
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Do a company’s ethics affect “shareholder
wealth”?
Citigroup Example
“Grow aggressively without breaking the law”
In 2007, Citigroup (“C”) traded as high as $55/share.
What is Citigroup’s stock price today?
What major problems have Citigroup and other banks had
in the past year?
GE Example
Be a “good citizen”
How has GE’s stock price done since the text was
published?
What problems has GE had?
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“Intrinsic Value” vs. “Stock Price” – Why does your text
emphasize?
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How do managers maximize “shareholder
wealth”?
IN THEORY -----
In equilibrium, a stock’s price should equal its true (intrinsic) value.
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A common exam question for FIN 303:
The primary operating goal of a publicly-owned
firm interested in serving its stockholders
should be to:
a. Maximize its expected total corporate income.
b. Maximize its expected EPS.
c. Minimize the chances of losses.
d. Maximize the stock price per share over the long
run, which is the stock’s intrinsic value.
e. Maximize the stock price on a specific target date.
(Correct Answer: d)
Why is “d” the correct answer?
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Another fine exam question for FIN 303:
Your best friend is the CEO of Hatho Inc. He just told you
that his company will announce next week a huge
increase in the quarterly dividend that will surely make the
stock price increase next week. He tells you to buy his
company’s stock immediately so you can profit. He also
tells you not to tell anyone else because only he and the
company’s board know about this information. If you buy
now, you will be:
a) Insider trading.
b) Committing a crime, punishable by prison time.
c) Committing a crime, punishable by a monetary fine.
d) Doing something unethical.
e) All the above.
f) None of the above.
(Correct Answer: e)
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Conflicts Between Managers and Shareholders
“Agency conflicts:
Many managers are naturally inclined to act in their own best interests
(which are not always the same as the interest of stockholders).
How can shareholders affect managerial behavior?
Try to align management and stockholders’ interest
If management benefits when stock holders benefit, they are
“aligned”
Examples:
Pay execs at least in part on their “performance” (stock price)
Pay some portion of execs’ compensation in stock and / or options
Direct intervention by shareholders (e.g. Calpers/Goldman)
The threat of firing (e.g. Citigroup’s Director Robert Rubin)
The threat of takeover (e.g. JPM Chase and WAMU)
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What are recent trends that affect businesses?
Increased regulation (A very timely topic.)
Text Example: CEOs and CFOs must now certify that their
financial statements are accurate – penalties include jail time
Regulation was passed as a result of the Enron mess
Globalization
Corporations increasingly likely to have some
production/sales/supplies in other countries
Additional challenges for managing financial and currency
risk (euro vs. $ example, IBM example)
Ever improving IT (information technology)
IT innovations include better processes for managing
financial data and analyzing projects and risks
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Responsibility of the Financial Staff
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