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
- shareholders
- creditors
- managers and employees
- board of directors
- customers
- suppliers
- governments/regulators
Principle-Agent Relationship
- shareholder and manger/director relationships
- controlling and minority shareholder relationships
- manager and board relationships
- shareholder v.s. creditor interests
- conflict between customers and shareholders
- conflict between customers and suppliers
- conflict between shareholders and governments/regulators
Stakeholder Management
- legal infrastructure
- employee laws
- governmental organizational
- comprise the regulation to which companies are subject
- contractual infrastructure
- contractual agreement with creditors
- contractual agreement with customers and suppliers
- employee contract
- 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
- straight voting--vote for each candidate separately
- cumulative voting--can accumulate all his shares for a single candidate
- proxy voting
- extraordinary general meeting--special resolution require a vote
board of directors
board structure
- one-tire board--include both internal and external directors
- two-tire board
- executive board directors--led by the CEO
- non-executive board directors
board responsibilities
- Selecting senior management, setting their compensation and bonus structure, evaluating their performance, and replacing them as needed.
- Setting the strategic direction for the company and making sure that management implements the strategy approved by the board.
- Approving capital structure changes, significant acquisitions, and large investment expenditures.
- Reviewing company performance and implementing any necessary corrective steps.
- Planning for continuity of management and the succession of the CEO and other senior managers.
- Establishing, monitoring, and overseeing the firm's internal controls and risk management system.
- Ensuring the quality of the firm's financial reporting and internal audit, as well as oversight of the external auditors.
board committees
- audit committees
- governance committees
- nominations committees
- compensation committees/remuneration committees
- risk committees
- investment committees
Factors Affecting Stakeholder Relationships and Corporate Governance
Market Factors
- shareholder engagement
- shareholder activism--shareholders' attempt to compel a company to act in a desired manner
- competition and takeovers--shareholders are persuaded to vote for a group seeking a controlling position
Non-Market Factors
- legal environment
- common law system v.s. civil law system, in common law system shareholders and creditors can appeal to rule against management decisions that are not expressly forbidden by statute or code
- the media
- negative media attention can affect the reputation of a company
- social media are used to protect stakeholders' interests
- the corporate governance industry
- SEC
Considerations in Corporate Governance
- company ownership and voting structure
- have dual class structure
- 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
- 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
- composition of shareholders
- relative strength of shareholders' rights
- management of long-term risks
Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG)
ESG investing:
- positive screening
- negative screening
- impact investing
- thematic investing
Capital Budgeting
The Capital Budgeting Process
- Idea generation
- Analyzing project proposals
- Create the firm-wide capital budget
- Monitoring decisions and conducting a post-audit
Categories of Capital Budgeting Projects
- replacement projects to maintain the business
- replacement projects for cost reduction
- expansion projects
- new products or market development
- mandatory projects
- other projects
Principles of Capital Budgeting
- 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
- Cash flows are based on opportunity costs
- The timing of cash flows is important
- Cash flows are analyzed on an after-tax basis
- Financing costs are reflected in the project's required rate of return
project interaction
- independent v.s. mutually exclusive projects
- project sequencing--projects must be undertaken in a certain order
- unlimited funds v.s. capital rationing
Investment Decision Criteria
-
Net Present Value
NPV profile
![](pictures/NPV profile.png)
-
Internal Interest Rate
- multiple IRR or No IRR problem
-
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
-
Discounted Payback Period--uses the present values of the project's estimated cash flows
-
Profitability Index
$$
PI=\frac{PV\ of\ future\ cash\ flows}{CF_0}=1+\frac{NPV}{CF_0}
$$
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