Principles of
Managerial FinanceBRIEF
Eighth Edition
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Berk/DeMarzoCorporate Finance*Corporate Finance: The Core*
Berk/DeMarzo/HarfordFundamentals of Corporate Finance*
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Chad J. ZutterUniversity of Pittsburgh
Scott B. SmartIndiana University
Principles of
Managerial FinanceBRIEF
EIGHTH EDITION
New York, NY
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ISBN 10: 0-13-447630-11 18 ISBN 13: 978-0-13-447630-8
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Dedicated to our good friend and mentor,
Dr. Lawrence J. Gitman,
who trusted us as coauthors and successors
of Principles of Managerial Finance, Brief Edition.
CJZ
SBS
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Brief Contents
Contents ix
About the Authors xxv
Preface xxvii
Acknowledgments xl
vii
PART 6 Long-Term Financial Decisions 505
12 Leverage and Capital Structure 506
13 Payout Policy 558
PART 7 Short-Term Financial Decisions 593
14 Working Capital and Current Assets Management 594
15 Current Liabilities Management 636
Appendix A-1
Glossary G-1
Index I-1
PART 1 Introduction to Managerial Finance 1
1 The Role of Managerial Finance 2 2 The Financial Market Environment 39
PART 2 Financial Tools 71
3 Financial Statements and Ratio Analysis 72
4 Long- and Short-Term Financial Planning 137
5 Time Value of Money 183
PART 3 Valuation of Securities 243
6 Interest Rates and Bond Valuation 244
7 Stock Valuation 291
PART 4 Risk and the Required Rate of Return 327
8 Risk and Return 328
9 The Cost of Capital 376
PART 5 Long-Term Investment Decisions 405
10 Capital Budgeting Techniques 406
11 Capital Budgeting Cash Flows and Risk Refinements 445
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Contents
ix
About the Authors xxv
Preface xxvii
Acknowledgments xl
1.1 Finance and the Firm 3What Is Finance? 3What Is a Firm? 4What Is the Goal of the Firm? 4The Role of Business Ethics 8
FOCUS ON PRACTICE: Must Search Engines Screen Out Fake News? 10
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 10
1.2 Managing the Firm 10
The Managerial Finance Function 11
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 19
1.3 Organizational Forms, Taxation, and the Principal-Agent Relationship 19
Legal Forms of Business Organization 19
Agency Problems and Agency Costs 26
Corporate Governance 26
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 30
in practice
1.4 Developing Skills for Your Career 30
Critical Thinking 30
Communication and Collaboration 31
Financial Computing Skills 31
Summary 31
Self-Test Problem 33
Warm-Up Exercises 33
Problems 35
Spreadsheet Exercise 38
PART 1 Introduction to Managerial Finance 1
1 The Role of Managerial Finance 2
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2.1 Financial Institutions 40
Commercial Banks, Investment Banks, and the Shadow Banking System 40
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 42
2.2 Financial Markets 42
The Relationship Between Institutions and Markets 42
The Money Market 43
The Capital Market 44
The Role of Capital Markets 48
FOCUS ON ETHICS: Should Insider Trading Be Legal? 50
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 51
2.3 Regulation of Financial Markets and Institutions 51
Regulations Governing Financial Institutions 51
Regulations Governing Financial Markets 52
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 53
2.4 The Securities Issuing Process 53
Issuing Common Stock 53
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 61
2.5 Financial Markets in Crisis 61
Financial Institutions and Real Estate Finance 62
Spillover Effects and Recovery from the Great Recession 64
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 65
Summary 65
Self-Test Problem 67
Warm-Up Exercises 68
Problems 68
Spreadsheet Exercise 70
in practice
2 The Financial Market Environment 39
x Contents
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Contents xi
PART 2 Financial Tools 71
3 Financial Statements and Ratio Analysis 72
3.1 The Stockholders’ Report 73
The Letter to Stockholders 73
The Four Key Financial Statements 73
FOCUS ON ETHICS:Earnings Shenanigans 74
Notes to the Financial Statements 80
Consolidating International Financial Statements 80
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 81
3.2 Using Financial Ratios 82
Interested Parties 82
Types of Ratio Comparisons 82
Cautions About Using Ratio Analysis 85
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 86
3.3 Liquidity Ratios 87
Current Ratio 87
Quick (Acid-Test) Ratio 89
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 90
3.4 Activity Ratios 90
Inventory Turnover 90
Average Collection Period 91
Average Payment Period 93
Total Asset Turnover 93
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 94
3.5 Debt Ratios 94
Debt Ratio 96
Debt-to-Equity Ratio 96
Times Interest Earned Ratio 97
Fixed-Payment Coverage Ratio 98
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 98
3.6 Profitability Ratios 98
Common-Size Income Statements 98
Gross Profit Margin 99
Operating Profit Margin 101
Net Profit Margin 101
Earnings Per Share (EPS) 102
Return on Total Assets (ROA) 103
Return on Equity (ROE) 103
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 105
3.7 Market Ratios 105
Price/Earnings (P/E) Ratio 106
Market/Book (M/B) Ratio 108
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 109
3.8 A Complete Ratio Analysis 109
Summary of Whole Foods’ Financial Condition 109
DuPont System of Analysis 113
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 116
Summary 116
Self-Test Problems 118
Warm-Up Exercises 119
Problems 120
Spreadsheet Exercise 135
in practice
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4.1 The Financial Planning Process 138
Long-Term (Strategic) Financial Plans 138
Short-Term (Operating) Financial Plans 139
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 140
4.2 Measuring the Firm’s Cash Flow 140
Depreciation 140
Depreciation Methods 141
Developing the Statement of Cash Flows 143
Free Cash Flow 148
FOCUS ON ETHICS: Is Excess Cash Always a Good Thing? 149
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 150
4.3 Cash Planning: Cash Budgets 151
The Sales Forecast 151
Preparing the Cash Budget 151
Evaluating the Cash Budget 156
Coping with Uncertainty in the Cash Budget 157
Cash Flow within the Month 159
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 159
4.4 Profit Planning: Pro Forma Statements 159
Preceding Year’s Financial Statements 160
Sales Forecast 160
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 161
4.5 Preparing the Pro Forma Income Statement 161
Considering Types of Costs and Expenses 162
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 163
4.6 Preparing the Pro Forma Balance Sheet 163
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 165
4.7 Evaluation of Pro Forma Statements 165
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 166
Summary 166
Self-Test Problems 168
Warm-Up Exercises 170
Problems 170
Spreadsheet Exercise 181
in practice
4 Long- and Short-Term Financial Planning 137
xii Contents
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5.1 The Role of Time Value in Finance 184
Future Value Versus Present Value 184
Computational Tools 185
Basic Patterns of Cash Flow 187
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 187
5.2 Single Amounts 188
Future Value of a Single Amount 188
Present Value of a Single Amount 192
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 195
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS 195
5.3 Annuities 196
Types of Annuities 196
Finding the Future Value of an Ordinary Annuity 197
Finding the Present Value of an Ordinary Annuity 198
Finding the Future Value of an Annuity Due 200
Finding the Present Value of an Annuity Due 201
Finding the Present Value of a Perpetuity 203
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 204
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS 204
5.4 Mixed Streams 205
Future Value of a Mixed Stream 205
Present Value of a Mixed Stream 207
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 208
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTION 208
5.5 Compounding Interest More Frequently Than Annually 208
Semiannual Compounding 208
Quarterly Compounding 209
A General Equation for Compounding 210
Using Computational Tools for Compounding 210
Continuous Compounding 211
Nominal and Effective Annual Rates of Interest 212
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 214
FOCUS ON ETHICS: Was the Deal for Manhattan a Swindle? 214
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS 215
5.6 Special Applications of Time Value 215
Determining Deposits Needed to Accumulate a Future Sum 215
Loan Amortization 216
Finding Interest or Growth Rates 218
Finding an Unknown Number of Periods 220
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 222
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS 222
Summary 223
Self-Test Problems 224
Warm-Up Exercises 225
Problems 226
Spreadsheet Exercise 242
in practice
5 Time Value of Money 183
Contents xiii
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PART 3 Valuation of Securities 243
xiv Contents
6 Interest Rates and Bond Valuation 244
6.1 Interest Rates and Required Returns 245
Interest Rate Fundamentals 245
Term Structure of Interest Rates 250
Risk Premiums: Issuer and Issue Characteristics 255
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 256
6.2 Government and Corporate Bonds 257
Legal Aspects of Corporate Bonds 257
Cost of Bonds to the Issuer 259
General Features of a Bond Issue 259
Bond Yields 260
Bond Prices 260
Bond Ratings 261
Common Types of Bonds 261
International Bond Issues 263
FOCUS ON ETHICS: “Can Bond Ratings Be Trusted?” 263
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 264
6.3 Valuation Fundamentals 265
Key Inputs 265
Basic Valuation Model 266
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 267
6.4 Bond Valuation 267
Bond Fundamentals 268
Bond Valuation 268
Semiannual Interest Rates and Bond Values 270
Changes in Bond Values 272
Yield to Maturity (YTM) 275
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 277
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS 277
Summary 277
Self-Test Problems 279
Warm-Up Exercises 280
Problems 281
Spreadsheet Exercise 290
in practicein practice
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7.1 Differences Between Debt and Equity 292
Voice in Management 292
Claims on Income and Assets 292
Maturity 293
Tax Treatment 293
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 293
7.2 Common and Preferred Stock 293
Common Stock 294
Preferred Stock 297
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 299
7.3 Common Stock Valuation 299
Market Efficiency and Stock Valuation 299
Common Stock Dividend Valuation Model 301
FOCUS ON PRACTICE: Understanding Human Behavior Helps Us Understand Investor Behavior 302
Free Cash Flow Stock Valuation Model 306
Other Approaches to Common Stock Valuation 309
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 312
7.4 Decision Making and Common Stock Value 312
Changes in Expected Dividends 313
Changes in Risk 313
Combined Effect 314
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 314
Summary 315
Self-Test Problems 317
Warm-Up Exercises 317
Problems 318
Spreadsheet Exercise 326
in practicein practice
Contents xv
7 Stock Valuation 291
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8.1 Risk and Return Fundamentals 329
What Is Risk? 329
What Is Return? 329
Risk Preferences 331
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 332
8.2 Risk of a Single Asset 332
Risk Assessment 332
Risk Measurement 335
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 340
8.3 Risk of a Portfolio 340
Portfolio Return and Standard Deviation 340
Correlation 342
Diversification 343
Correlation, Diversification, Risk, and Return 345
International Diversification 346
GLOBAL FOCUS: An International Flavor to Risk Reduction 347
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 348
8.4 Risk and Return: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) 348
Types of Risk 348
The Model: CAPM 349
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 358
Summary 358
Self-Test Problems 360
Warm-Up Exercises 361
Problems 362
Spreadsheet Exercise 374
in practice
xvi Contents
PART 4 Risk and the Required Rate of Return 327
8 Risk and Return 328
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9.1 Overview of the Cost of Capital 377
FOCUS ON ETHICS:The Cost of Capital Also Rises 377
The Basic Concept 378
Sources of Long-Term Capital 380
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 381
9.2 Cost of Long-Term Debt 381
Net Proceeds 381
Before-Tax Cost of Debt 382
After-Tax Cost of Debt 384
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 385
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTION 385
9.3 Cost of Preferred Stock 385
Preferred Stock Dividends 386
Calculating the Cost of Preferred Stock 386
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 386
9.4 Cost of Common Stock 386
Finding the Cost of Common Stock Equity 387
Cost of Retained Earnings 390
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 391
9.5 Weighted Average Cost of Capital 391
Calculating the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) 391
Capital Structure Weights 393
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 394
Summary 394
Self-Test Problem 395
Warm-Up Exercises 396
Problems 397
Spreadsheet Exercise 404
in practice
Contents xvii
9 The Cost of Capital 376
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PART 5 Long-Term Investment Decisions 405
xviii Contents
10 Capital Budgeting Techniques 406
10.1 Overview of Capital Budgeting 407
Motives for Capital Expenditure 407
Steps in the Process 407
Basic Terminology 408
Capital Budgeting Techniques 409
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 410
10.2 Payback Period 410
Decision Criteria 411
Pros and Cons of Payback Analysis 411
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 414
10.3 Net Present Value (NPV) 414
Decision Criteria 415
NPV and the Profitability Index 416
NPV and Economic Value Added 417
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 418
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTION 418
10.4 Internal Rate of Return (IRR) 419
Decision Criteria 419
Calculating the IRR 419
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 422
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTION 422
10.5 Comparing NPV and IRR Techniques 422
Net Present Value Profiles 422
Conflicting Rankings 424
Which Approach Is Better? 427
FOCUS ON ETHICS: Baby You Can Drive My Car—Just Not a VW Diesel 429
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 429
Summary 430
Self-Test Problem 431
Warm-Up Exercises 432
Problems 433
Spreadsheet Exercise 443
in practice
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11.1 Project Cash Flows 446
Major Cash Flow Types 446
Replacement Versus Expansion Decisions 447
Sunk Costs and Opportunity Costs 448
FOCUS ON ETHICS: Fumbling Sunk Costs 449
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 450
11.2 Finding the Initial Investment 450
Installed Cost of the New Asset 451
After-Tax Proceeds from the Sale of the Old Asset 451
Change in Net Working Capital 454
Calculating the Initial Investment 455
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 456
11.3 Finding the Operating Cash Flows 456
Interpreting the Term Cash Flows 456
Interpreting the Term After-Tax 457
Interpreting the Term Incremental 459
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 461
11.4 Finding the Terminal Cash Flow 461
After-Tax Proceeds from the Sale of New and Old Assets 461
Change in Net Working Capital 462
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 463
11.5 Risk in Capital Budgeting (Behavioral Approaches) 463
Breakeven Analysis 464
Scenario Analysis 466
Simulation 467
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 468
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTION 468
11.6 Risk-Adjusted Discount Rates 468
Determining Risk-Adjusted Discount Rates (RADRs) 469
Applying RADRs 471
Portfolio Effects 474
RADRs in Practice 474
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 476
11.7 Capital Budgeting Refinements 476
Comparing Projects with Unequal Lives 476
Recognizing Real Options 479
Capital Rationing 480
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 483
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTION 483
Summary 483
Self-Test Problems 485
Warm-Up Exercises 487
Problems 489
Spreadsheet Exercises 504
in practice
Contents xix
11 Capital Budgeting Cash Flows and Risk Refinements 445
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PART 6 Long-Term Financial Decisions 505
12 Leverage and Capital Structure 506
12.1 Leverage 507
Breakeven Analysis 508
Operating Leverage 511
FOCUS ON PRACTICE:Qualcomm’s Leverage 514
Financial Leverage 515
Total Leverage 519
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 521
12.2 The Firm’s Capital Structure 521
Types of Capital 522
External Assessment of Capital Structure 522
Capital Structure of Non–U.S. Firms 524
Capital Structure Theory 525
Optimal Capital Structure 533
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 535
12.3 EBIT–EPS Approach to Capital Structure 536
Presenting a Financing Plan Graphically 536
Comparing Alternative Capital Structures 537
Considering Risk in EBIT–EPS Analysis 538
Basic Shortcoming of EBIT–EPS Analysis 539
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 539
12.4 Choosing the Optimal Capital Structure 539
Linkage 539
Estimating Value 540
Maximizing Value Versus Maximizing EPS 540
Some Other Important Considerations 542
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 543
Summary 543
Self-Test Problems 544
Warm-Up Exercises 546
Problems 546
Spreadsheet Exercise 557
in practice
xx Contents
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13.1 The Basics of Payout Policy 559
Elements of Payout Policy 559
Trends in Earnings and Dividends 559
Trends in Dividends and Share Repurchases 561
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 562
FOCUS ON ETHICS: Buyback Mountain 563
13.2 The Mechanics of Payout Policy 563
Cash Dividend Payment Procedures 564
Share Repurchase Procedures 566
Tax Treatment of Dividends and Repurchases 567
Dividend Reinvestment Plans 568
Stock Price Reactions to Corporate Payouts 568
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 569
13.3 Relevance of Payout Policy 569
Residual Theory of Dividends 569
The Dividend Irrelevance Theory 570
Arguments for Dividend Relevance 571
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 572
13.4 Factors Affecting Dividend Policy 572
Legal Constraints 573
Contractual Constraints 574
Growth Prospects 574
Owner Considerations 574
Market Considerations 575
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 575
13.5 Types of Dividend Policies 575
Constant-Payout-Ratio Dividend Policy 575
Regular Dividend Policy 576
Low-Regular-and-Extra Dividend Policy 577
➔ REVIEW QUESTION 577
13.6 Other Forms of Dividends 577
Stock Dividends 578
Stock Splits 579
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 581
Summary 581
Self-Test Problem 583
Warm-Up Exercises 583
Problems 584
Spreadsheet Exercise 591
in practice
13 Payout Policy 558
Contents xxi
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PART 7 Short-Term Financial Decisions 593
14 Working Capital and Current Assets Management 594
14.1 Net Working Capital Fundamentals 595
Working Capital Management 595
Net Working Capital 596
Tradeoff between Profitability and Risk 596
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 598
14.2 Cash Conversion Cycle 598
Calculating the Cash Conversion Cycle 599
Funding Requirements of the Cash Conversion Cycle 600
Strategies for Managing the Cash Conversion Cycle 604
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 604
14.3 Inventory Management 604
Differing Viewpoints about Inventory Level 605
Common Techniques for Managing Inventory 605
International Inventory Management 610
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 610
14.4 Accounts Receivable Management 610
Credit Selection and Standards 611
FOCUS ON ETHICS: If You Can Bilk It, They Will Come 612
Credit Terms 616
Credit Monitoring 618
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 620
14.5 Management of Receipts and Disbursements 620
Float 621
Speeding Up Collections 621
Slowing Down Payments 622
Cash Concentration 622
Zero-Balance Accounts 623
Investing in Marketable Securities 624
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 625
Summary 626
Self-Test Problems 628
Warm-Up Exercises 628
Problems 629
Spreadsheet Exercise 634
in practice
xxii Contents
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15.1 Spontaneous Liabilities 637
Accounts Payable Management 637
Accruals 642
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 642
15.2 Unsecured Sources of Short-Term Loans 642
Bank Loans 642
Commercial Paper 648
FOCUS ON PRACTICE: The Ebb and Flow of Commercial Paper 649
International Loans 650
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 651
15.3 Secured Sources of Short-Term Loans 652
Characteristics of Secured Short-Term Loans 652
Use of Accounts Receivable as Collateral 653
Use of Inventory as Collateral 655
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS 657
Summary 657
Self-Test Problem 658
Warm-Up Exercises 659
Problems 659
Spreadsheet Exercise 666
in practice
15 Current Liabilities Management 636
Appendix A-1
Glossary G-1
Index I-1
Contents xxiii
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xxv
About the Authors
Chad J. Zutter is a finance professor and the Dean’s Excellence Faculty Fel-low at the Katz Graduate School of Business at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Zutter received his B.B.A. from the University of Texas at Arlington and his Ph.D. from Indiana University. His research has a practical, applied focus and has been the subject of feature stories in, among other prominent outlets, The Economist and CFO Magazine. His papers have been cited in arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court and in consultation with companies such as Google and Intel. Dr. Zutter won the prestigious Jensen Prize for the best paper published in the Journal of Financial Economics and a best paper award from the Journal of Corporate Finance, where he was recently named Associate Editor. He has won teaching awards at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University and the Katz Graduate School of Business at the University of Pittsburgh. Prior to his career in academics, Dr. Zutter was a submariner in the U.S. Navy. Dr. Zutter and his wife have four children and live in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In his free time he enjoys horseback riding and downhill skiing.
Scott B. Smart is a finance professor and the Whirlpool Finance Faculty Fellow at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University. Dr. Smart received his B.B.A. from Baylor University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Stanford University. His research focuses primarily on applied corporate finance topics and has been published in journals such as the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Financial Economics, the Journal of Corporate Finance, Financial Management, and others. His articles have been cited by business publications including The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and Business Week. Winner of more than a dozen teaching awards, Dr. Smart has been listed multiple times as a top busi-ness school teacher by Business Week. He has held Visiting Professor positions at the University of Otago and Stanford University, and he worked as a Visiting Scholar for Intel Corporation, focusing on that company’s mergers and acqui-sitions activity during the ‘‘Dot-com’’ boom in the late 1990s. As a volunteer, Dr. Smart currently serves on the boards of the Indiana University Credit Union and Habitat for Humanity. In his spare time he enjoys outdoor pursuits such as hiking and fly fishing.
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xxvii
Preface
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Finance is a dynamic discipline, as illustrated on this book’s cover by the evolu-tion of payment methods from coins and paper currency to bitcoin. Technology is rapidly reshaping finance, just as it has other industries. For example, in September 2017 Google introduced a new payment technology in India. Tez, a method of transferring money using sounds to connect two devices, was down-loaded by millions of consumers in a matter of days. As we made plans to publish the eighth edition, we were mindful of changes in managerial finance practices that have taken hold in recent years. We carefully assessed feedback from users of the seventh edition as well as instructors not currently using our text about content changes that would improve this teaching and learning tool.
In every chapter, our changes were designed to make the material more up to date and more relevant for students. A number of new topics have been added at appropriate places, and new features appear in each chapter:
• We have rewritten all of the Focus on Ethics boxes, using new examples to highlight situations in which businesses or individuals have engaged in unethi-cal behavior. The boxes explore the consequences of ethical lapses and the ways in which markets and governments play a role in enforcing ethical standards.
• New in this edition are Chapter Introduction Videos and animations. In the introduction videos the authors explain the importance of the chapter content within the context of managerial finance. The animations for select in-chapter figures and examples allow students to manipulate inputs to determine out-puts in order to illustrate concepts and reinforce learning. MyLab Finance also offers new and updated Solution Videos that allow students to watch a video of the author discussing or solving in-chapter examples. We have also updated the financial calculator images that appear in the book to better match the financial calculator available on MyLab Finance.
• The chapter-ending Spreadsheet Exercises as well as select end-of-chapter problems in the text are now offered in MyLab Finance as auto-graded Excel Projects. Using proven, field-tested technology, auto-graded Excel Projects allow instructors to seamlessly integrate Microsoft Excel content into their course without having to manually grade spreadsheets. Students have the opportunity to practice important finance skills in Excel, helping them to master key concepts and gain proficiency with the program.
• We added new problems to each chapter, many of which require students to use real-world data to reach a solution.
The chapter sequence is essentially unchanged from the prior edition, but there are some noteworthy changes within each chapter. This edition contains fifteen chapters divided into seven parts. Each part is introduced by a brief over-view, which is intended to give students an advance sense for the collective value of the chapters included in the part.
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Part 1 contains two chapters. Chapter 1 provides an overview of the role of managerial finance in a business enterprise. It contains new, expanded content focusing on the goal of the firm and the broad principles that financial managers use in their pursuit of that goal. Chapter 2 describes the financial market context in which firms operate, with new coverage focusing on the transactions costs investors face when trading in secondary markets.
Part 2 contains three chapters focused on basic financial skills such as finan-cial statement analysis, cash flow analysis, and time-value-of-money calculations. Chapter 3 provides an in-depth ratio analysis using real data from Whole Foods just prior to its acquisition by Amazon. The ratios provide opportunities for interesting discussion about some of the possible motives for that acquisition. We reorganized the flow of material in Chapter 4 to emphasize first the broad goals of strategic and operational financial planning and then the importance of cash flow within any financial plan. In Chapter 5, we rewrote much of the discussion to make time-value-of-money concepts simpler and more intuitive. We also added new coverage of growing perpetuities.
Part 3 focuses on bond and stock valuation. We placed these two chapters just ahead of the risk and return chapter to provide students with exposure to basic material on bonds and stocks that is easier to grasp than some of the more theoretical concepts in the next part. New in Chapter 6 is a discussion of the neg-ative interest rates prevailing on government bonds in Japan and some European countries, as well as an expanded discussion of the tendency of the yield curve to invert prior to a recession. Chapter 7 offers new coverage of the use of price-to-earnings multiples to value stocks.
Part 4 contains the risk and return chapter as well as the chapter on the cost of capital. We believe that following the risk and return chapter with the cost of capital material helps students understand the important principle that the expectations of a firm’s investors shape how the firm should approach major investment decisions (which are covered in Part 5). In other words, Part 4 is designed to help students understand where a project “hurdle rate” comes from before they start using hurdle rates in capital budgeting problems. Updates to Chapter 8 include new historical data on stocks, bonds, and Treasury bills, as well as examples and problems featuring real data on companies such as Apple, Google, Coca-Cola, and Wal-Mart. Chapter 9 contains new material on the use of market-value-based weights in the cost of capital calculation featuring actual data on the capital structure of Netflix. Throughout the chapter we have revised examples and problems to reflect today’s low interest rate environment and the correspondingly low after-tax cost of debt faced by most public companies.
Part 5 contains two chapters on various capital budgeting topics. The first chapter focuses on capital budgeting methods such as payback and net present value analysis. A new feature of this chapter is an updated discussion of eco-nomic value added using data from Exxon Mobil Corp. The second chapter in this part explains how financial analysts construct cash flow projections, which are a required component of net present value analysis. It also describes how firms analyze the risks associated with capital investments.
Part 6 deals with the topics of capital structure and payout policy. These two chapters contain updated material on trends in firms’ use of leverage and their payout practices. Chapter 12 provides a new Focus on Practice box dis-cussing how Qualcomm’s highly skilled labor force turns what often is thought of as a variable cost into a fixed cost and thereby creates operating leverage.
xxviii Preface
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Preface xxix
The chapter also contains new expanded coverage of the role that expected bank-ruptcy costs play in capital structure decisions. A new discussion in Chapter 13 highlights how and why companies have shifted their payout policies away from dividends and toward share repurchases over time.
Part 7 contains two chapters centered on working capital issues. A major development in business has been the extent to which firms have found new ways to economize on working capital investments. The first chapter in Part 7 explains why and how firms work hard to squeeze resources from their investments in current assets such as cash and inventory. The second chapter in this part focuses more on management of current liabilities.
Although the text content is sequential, instructors can assign almost any chapter as a self-contained unit, enabling instructors to customize the text to various teaching strategies and course lengths.
Like the previous editions, the eighth edition incorporates a proven learning system, which integrates pedagogy with concepts and practical applications. It concentrates on the knowledge that is needed to make keen financial deci-sions in an increasingly competitive business environment. The strong pedagogy and generous use of examples—many of which use real data from markets or companies—make the text an easily accessible resource for in-class learning or out-of-class learning, such as online courses and self-study programs.
SOLVING TEACHING AND LEARNING CHALLENGES
The desire to write Principles of Managerial Finance, Brief Edition came from the experience of teaching the introductory managerial finance course. Those who have taught the introductory course many times can appreciate the difficul-ties that some students have absorbing and applying financial concepts. Students want a book that speaks to them in plain English and explains how to apply financial concepts to solve real-world problems. These students want more than just description; they also want demonstration of concepts, tools, and techniques. This book is written with the needs of students in mind, and it effectively delivers the resources that students need to succeed in the introductory finance course.
Courses and students have changed since the first edition of this book, but the goals of the text have not changed. The conversational tone and wide use of examples set off in the text still characterize Principles of Managerial Finance, Brief Edition. Building on those strengths, eight editions, numerous transla-tions, and well over half a million U.S. users, Principles has evolved based on feedback from both instructors and students, from adopters, nonadopters, and practitioners. In this edition, we have worked to ensure that the book reflects contemporary thinking and pedagogy to further strengthen the delivery of the classic topics that our users have come to expect. Below are descriptions of the most important resources in Principles that help meet teaching and learning challenges.
Users of Principles of Managerial Finance, Brief Edition have praised the effectiveness of the book’s Teaching and Learning System, which they hail as one of its hallmarks. The system, driven by a set of carefully developed learning goals, has been retained and polished in this eighth edition. The “walkthrough” on the pages that follow illustrates and describes the key elements of the Teaching and Learning System. We encourage both students and instructors to acquaint them-selves at the start of the semester with the many useful features the book offers.
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4 PART ONE Introduction to Managerial Finance
1.1 Finance and the Firm
The field of finance is broad and dynamic. Finance influences everything that firms do, from hiring personnel to building factories to launching new advertis-ing campaigns. Because almost any aspect of business has important financial dimensions, many financially oriented career opportunities await those who understand the principles of finance described in this textbook. Even if you see yourself pursuing a career in another discipline such as marketing, operations, accounting, supply chain, or human resources, you’ll find that understanding a few crucial ideas in finance will enhance your professional success. Knowing how financial managers think is important, especially if you’re not one yourself, because they are often the gatekeepers of corporate resources. Fluency in the lan-guage of finance will improve your ability to communicate the value of your ideas to your employer. Financial knowledge will also make you a smarter con-sumer and a wiser investor with your own money.
WHAT IS FINANCE?
Finance is the science and art of how individuals and firms raise, allocate, and invest money. The science of finance utilizes financial theories and concepts to establish general rules that can guide managers in their decisions. The art of finance involves adapting theory to particular business situations with their own unique circum-stances. Managerial finance is concerned with the responsibilities of a financial manager working in a business. Though business finance is the primary focus of this book, the principles of finance apply to both personal and professional decision making. At the personal level, for instance, finance helps individuals decide how much of their earnings to spend, how much to save, and how to invest their savings. Financial thinking helps consumers decide when borrowing money is appropriate and enables them to critically evaluate loan offers with different terms. In a business context, finance involves the same types of decisions: how firms raise money from investors, how firms invest money in attempting to create value for their investors, and how firms decide whether to reinvest earnings in the business or distribute
LG 1 LG 2earnings back to investors. The keys to good financial decisions are much the same for businesses and individuals, which is why most students will benefit from an understanding of finance regardless of their profession. Learning the techniques of good financial analysis will not only help you make better financial decisions as a consumer but will also assist you in understanding the financial consequences of important business decisions, no matter what career path you follow.
WHAT IS A FIRM?
What is a firm? Put simply, a firm is a business organization that sells goods or services. However, a more complete answer attempts to explain why firms exist. They exist because investors want access to risky investment opportunities. In other words, firms are risky business organizations that, if not for investors’ will-ingness to bear risk, would have difficulty generating the necessary investment capital to operate. For example, most investors do not have the expertise or wealth required to start a personal computer company, so instead they invest in a company like Apple. Even when a few individuals, such as Steve Jobs, Steve Woz-niak, and Ronald Wayne, had the requisite expertise and wealth to start Apple Computer in a garage in 1976, vast amounts of additional money (i.e., invest-ment capital) from investors were necessary for the firm to grow into what Apple is today. So, ultimately, firms are intermediaries that bring together investors and risky investment opportunities. Firms pool investment capital, make risky invest-ment decisions, and manage risky investments all on behalf of investors who would otherwise not be able to do so effectively or efficiently on their own.
WHAT IS THE GOAL OF THE FIRM?
What goal should managers pursue? This question has no shortage of possible answers. Some might argue that managers should focus entirely on satisfying customers. Firms pursuing this goal could measure their products’ market shares to gauge progress. Others suggest that managers must first inspire and motivate employees; in that case, employee turnover might be the key success metric to watch. Clearly, the goal or goals that managers select will affect many of the decisions they make, so choosing an objective is a critical determinant of how businesses operate.
Maximize Shareholder Wealth
Finance teaches that the primary goal of managers should be to maximize the wealth of the firm’s owners—the stockholders or shareholders. Through the years, that recommendation has generated a lot of controversy. The Economist magazine once referred to shareholder value maximization as “the most powerful idea in business,” but Jack Welch, the long-time Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of General Electric and a man Fortune magazine named “Manager of the Century,” once called maximizing shareholder value “the dumbest idea in the world.” Welch’s assessment is particularly ironic because during his leadership, almost no company generated more wealth for its shareholders than General Electric. A $1,000 invest-ment in GE stock made in 1981 when Welch took the reigns as CEO would have grown to roughly $67,000 by the time he retired in 2001. The simplest and best measure of stockholder wealth is the share price, so most finance textbooks (includ-ing ours) instruct managers to take actions that increase the firm’s share price.
financeThe science and art of how indi-viduals and firms raise, allocate, and invest money.
managerial financeConcerns the duties of the financial manager in a business.
MATTER OF FACT
Finance Professors Aren’t Like Everyone Else
Professionals who advise individual investors know that many people are more willing to invest in the stock market if it has been rising in the recent past and are less willing to do so if it has been falling. Such “trend-chasing” behavior often leaves investors worse off than if they had invested consistently over time. Classical finance theory suggests that past performance of the stock market is a very poor predictor of future performance, and therefore individuals should not base investment decisions on the market’s recent history. A survey found that at least one group of investors did not fall prey to trend chasing in the stock market. When deciding whether to invest in stocks, finance profes-sors were not influenced by the market’s recent trend, presumably because they know that past performance does not predict the future. That’s just one of the lessons in this book that can help you make better choices with your own money.
Source: Hibbert, Lawrence, and Prakash, 2012, “Do finance professors invest like everyone else?” Financial Analysts Journal.
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Learning goal icons tie chapter content to the learning goals and appear next to related text sec-tions and again in the chapter-end summary, end-of-chapter problems and exercises, and supplements such as the Test Bank and MyLab.
xxx Preface
2
1
LEARNING GOALS
Define finance and the managerial finance function.
Describe the goal of the firm, and explain why maximizing the value of the firm is an appropriate goal for a business.
Identify the primary activities of the financial manager.
Explain the key principles that financial managers use when making business decisions.
Describe the legal forms of business organization.
Describe the nature of the principal–agent relationship between the owners and managers of a corporation, and explain how various corporate governance mechanisms attempt to manage agency problems.
LG 1
LG 2
LG 3
LG 4
LG 5
LG 6
The Role of Managerial Finance
WHY THIS CHAPTER MATTERS TO YOU
In your professional lifeACCOUNTING You need to understand the relationships between the accounting and finance functions within the firm, how decision makers rely on the financial statements you prepare, why maximizing a firm’s value is not the same as maximizing its profits, and the ethical duty you have when reporting financial results to investors and other stakeholders.
INFORMATION SYSTEMS You need to understand why financial information is important to managers in all functional areas, the documentation that firms must produce to comply with various regulations, and how manipulating information for personal gain can get managers into serious trouble.
MANAGEMENT You need to understand the various legal forms of a business organization, how to communicate the goal of the firm to employees and other stakeholders, the advantages and disadvantages of the agency relationship between a firm’s managers and its owners, and how compensation systems can align or misalign the interests of managers and investors.
MARKETING You need to understand why increasing a firm’s revenues or market share is not always a good thing, how financial managers evaluate aspects of customer relations such as cash and credit management policies, and why a firm’s brands are an important part of its value to investors.
OPERATIONS You need to understand the financial benefits of increasing a firm’s production efficiency, why maximizing profit by cutting costs may not increase the firm’s value, and how managers have a duty to act on behalf of investors when operating a corporation.
In your personal lifeMany principles of managerial finance also apply to your personal life. Learning a few simple principles can help you manage your own money more effectively.
CH
AP
TE
R
MyLab Finance Chapter Introduction Video
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Six Learning Goals at the start of the chapter highlight the most impor-tant concepts and techniques in the chapter. Students are reminded to think about the learning goals while working through the chapter by stra-tegically placed learning goal icons.
To help students understand the rel-evance of a chapter within the over-arching framework of managerial finance, every chapter has available in MyLab Finance a short chapter intro-duction video by an author.
Every chapter opens with a feature, titled Why This Chapter Matters to You, that helps motivate student interest by highlighting both profes-sional and personal benefits from achieving the chapter learning goals.
Its first part, In Your Professional Life, discusses the intersection of the finance topics covered in the chapter with the concerns of other major business disciplines. It encourages students majoring in accounting, information systems, management, marketing, and operations to appre-ciate how financial acumen will help them achieve their professional goals.
The second part, In Your Personal Life, identifies topics in the chapter that will have particular application to personal finance. This feature also helps students appreciate the tasks performed in a business setting by pointing out that the tasks are not necessarily different from those that are relevant in their personal lives.
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10 PART ONE Introduction to Managerial Finance
To illustrate, consider that in March 2017, the online retailing giant Amazon reported that it earned a profit of $4.90 per share over the previous 12 months. Another company, Clorox, reported almost identical earnings per share of $4.92. Yet the stock prices of these two companies could not have been more different. Amazon was trading for $850 per share, whereas Clorox stock was selling for just $137. In other words, investors were willing to pay 6 times more for shares of Amazon even though it reported virtually the same EPS as Clorox. Why? Sev-eral factors may contribute, but the most plausible answer is that investors envi-sion rosier long-term prospects for Amazon. If the only matter of concern to investors was short-term profits, then the prices of Amazon and Clorox should have been much closer because their profits, at least in the short term, were nearly identical.
Third, the stakeholder perspective is intrinsically difficult to implement, and advocates of the idea that managers should consider all stakeholders’ interests along with those of shareholders do not typically indicate how man-agers should carry it out. For example, how much emphasis should managers place on the interests of different stakeholder groups? Are the interests of employees more or less important than the desires of customers? Should mem-bers of the local community who do no business with the firm have an equal say with the firm’s suppliers? When different stakeholder groups disagree on the action a firm should take, how should managers make important decisions? In contrast, the goal of shareholder maximization clarifies what actions man-agers should take.
Fourth, many people misinterpret the statement that managers should maxi-mize shareholder wealth as implying that managers should take any action, including illegal or unethical actions, that increases the stock price. Even the most ardent supporters of shareholder value maximization as the firm’s primary goal acknowledge that managers must act within ethical and legal boundaries.
THE ROLE OF BUSINESS ETHICS
Business ethics are the standards of conduct or moral judgment that apply to persons engaged in commerce. Violations of these standards involve a variety of actions: “creative accounting,” earnings management, misleading financial fore-casts, insider trading, fraud, excessive executive compensation, options backdat-ing, bribery, and kickbacks. The financial press has reported many such violations in recent years, involving such well-known companies as Wells Fargo, where employees opened new accounts without authorization from customers, and Volkswagen, where engineers set up elaborate deceptions to get around pol-lution controls. In these and similar cases, the offending companies suffered various penalties, including fines levied by government agencies, damages paid to plaintiffs in lawsuits, or lost revenues from customers who abandoned the firms because of their errant behavior. Most companies have adopted formal ethical standards, although clearly adherence to and enforcement of those stan-dards vary. The goal of such standards is to motivate business and market par-ticipants to adhere to both the letter and the spirit of laws and regulations concerned with business and professional practice. Most business leaders believe that businesses actually strengthen their competitive positions by maintaining high ethical standards.
business ethicsStandards of conduct or moral judgment that apply to persons engaged in commerce.
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For help in study and review, boldfaced key terms and their definitions appear in the margin where they are first introduced. These terms are also bold-faced in the book’s index and appear in the end-of-book glossary.
4 PART ONE Introduction to Managerial Finance
1.1 Finance and the Firm
The field of finance is broad and dynamic. Finance influences everything that firms do, from hiring personnel to building factories to launching new advertis-ing campaigns. Because almost any aspect of business has important financial dimensions, many financially oriented career opportunities await those who understand the principles of finance described in this textbook. Even if you see yourself pursuing a career in another discipline such as marketing, operations, accounting, supply chain, or human resources, you’ll find that understanding a few crucial ideas in finance will enhance your professional success. Knowing how financial managers think is important, especially if you’re not one yourself, because they are often the gatekeepers of corporate resources. Fluency in the lan-guage of finance will improve your ability to communicate the value of your ideas to your employer. Financial knowledge will also make you a smarter con-sumer and a wiser investor with your own money.
WHAT IS FINANCE?
Finance is the science and art of how individuals and firms raise, allocate, and invest money. The science of finance utilizes financial theories and concepts to establish general rules that can guide managers in their decisions. The art of finance involves adapting theory to particular business situations with their own unique circum-stances. Managerial finance is concerned with the responsibilities of a financial manager working in a business. Though business finance is the primary focus of this book, the principles of finance apply to both personal and professional decision making. At the personal level, for instance, finance helps individuals decide how much of their earnings to spend, how much to save, and how to invest their savings. Financial thinking helps consumers decide when borrowing money is appropriate and enables them to critically evaluate loan offers with different terms. In a business context, finance involves the same types of decisions: how firms raise money from investors, how firms invest money in attempting to create value for their investors, and how firms decide whether to reinvest earnings in the business or distribute
LG 1 LG 2earnings back to investors. The keys to good financial decisions are much the same for businesses and individuals, which is why most students will benefit from an understanding of finance regardless of their profession. Learning the techniques of good financial analysis will not only help you make better financial decisions as a consumer but will also assist you in understanding the financial consequences of important business decisions, no matter what career path you follow.
WHAT IS A FIRM?
What is a firm? Put simply, a firm is a business organization that sells goods or services. However, a more complete answer attempts to explain why firms exist. They exist because investors want access to risky investment opportunities. In other words, firms are risky business organizations that, if not for investors’ will-ingness to bear risk, would have difficulty generating the necessary investment capital to operate. For example, most investors do not have the expertise or wealth required to start a personal computer company, so instead they invest in a company like Apple. Even when a few individuals, such as Steve Jobs, Steve Woz-niak, and Ronald Wayne, had the requisite expertise and wealth to start Apple Computer in a garage in 1976, vast amounts of additional money (i.e., invest-ment capital) from investors were necessary for the firm to grow into what Apple is today. So, ultimately, firms are intermediaries that bring together investors and risky investment opportunities. Firms pool investment capital, make risky invest-ment decisions, and manage risky investments all on behalf of investors who would otherwise not be able to do so effectively or efficiently on their own.
WHAT IS THE GOAL OF THE FIRM?
What goal should managers pursue? This question has no shortage of possible answers. Some might argue that managers should focus entirely on satisfying customers. Firms pursuing this goal could measure their products’ market shares to gauge progress. Others suggest that managers must first inspire and motivate employees; in that case, employee turnover might be the key success metric to watch. Clearly, the goal or goals that managers select will affect many of the decisions they make, so choosing an objective is a critical determinant of how businesses operate.
Maximize Shareholder Wealth
Finance teaches that the primary goal of managers should be to maximize the wealth of the firm’s owners—the stockholders or shareholders. Through the years, that recommendation has generated a lot of controversy. The Economist magazine once referred to shareholder value maximization as “the most powerful idea in business,” but Jack Welch, the long-time Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of General Electric and a man Fortune magazine named “Manager of the Century,” once called maximizing shareholder value “the dumbest idea in the world.” Welch’s assessment is particularly ironic because during his leadership, almost no company generated more wealth for its shareholders than General Electric. A $1,000 invest-ment in GE stock made in 1981 when Welch took the reigns as CEO would have grown to roughly $67,000 by the time he retired in 2001. The simplest and best measure of stockholder wealth is the share price, so most finance textbooks (includ-ing ours) instruct managers to take actions that increase the firm’s share price.
financeThe science and art of how indi-viduals and firms raise, allocate, and invest money.
managerial financeConcerns the duties of the financial manager in a business.
MATTER OF FACT
Finance Professors Aren’t Like Everyone Else
Professionals who advise individual investors know that many people are more willing to invest in the stock market if it has been rising in the recent past and are less willing to do so if it has been falling. Such “trend-chasing” behavior often leaves investors worse off than if they had invested consistently over time. Classical finance theory suggests that past performance of the stock market is a very poor predictor of future performance, and therefore individuals should not base investment decisions on the market’s recent history. A survey found that at least one group of investors did not fall prey to trend chasing in the stock market. When deciding whether to invest in stocks, finance profes-sors were not influenced by the market’s recent trend, presumably because they know that past performance does not predict the future. That’s just one of the lessons in this book that can help you make better choices with your own money.
Source: Hibbert, Lawrence, and Prakash, 2012, “Do finance professors invest like everyone else?” Financial Analysts Journal.
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Matter of Fact boxes provide interesting empirical facts, usually featuring recent data, that add back-ground and depth to the material covered in the chapter.
Preface xxxi
Examples are an important component of the book’s learning system. Numbered and clearly set off from the text, they provide an immediate and concrete demonstration of how to apply financial concepts, tools, and techniques. Many of these feature real-world data.
Examples illustrating time-value-of-money techniques often show the use of time lines, equations, financial cal-culators, and spreadsheets (with cell formulas). For instructors who prefer to use tables with interest rate fac-tors, an IRF icon appearing with some examples indicates that the example can be solved using the interest rate factors. The reader can access the Interest Rate Factor Supplement in MyLab Finance. The Interest Rate Factor Supplement is a self-contained supplement that explains how the reader should use the interest rate factors and documents how the in-chapter examples can be solved by using them.
CHAPTER 5 Time Value of Money 209
In Example 5.8 involving Braden Company, we found the present value of Braden’s $700, 5-year ordinary annuity discounted at 4% to be $3,116.28. We now assume that Braden’s $700 annual cash in flow occurs at the start of each year and is thereby an annuity due. The following timeline illustrates the new situation.
EXAMPLE 5.10IRF
MyLab Finance Animation
Timeline for present value of an annuity due ($700 beginning-of-year cash flows, discounted at 4%, over 5 years)
0 1 2 3 4 5Year
$700
700.00673.08647.19622.30598.36
$3,240.93
$
Present Value
$700 $700 $700 $700
MyLab Finance Financial Calculator
PMTI/YNCPTPV
Note: Switch calculatorto BEGIN mode.
SolutionCPT RCL ENTER CPT CPTCF NPV IRR DEL INSN I/Y PV
7
4
1
0
8
5
2
.
9
6
3
=
/
*–
+
PMT FVC/Y
C/CE
+/–
1/xy x
P/Y xP/Y BGN AMORT
RESET
Input
54700
Function
–3,240.93
PRESENT VALUE OF AN ANNUITY DUEAnnual annuity paymentAnnual rate of interestNumber of yearsPresent value
12345
$7004%5
–$3,240.93
Entry in Cell B5 is =PV(B3,B4,B2,0,1).The minus sign appears before the $3,240.93
in B5 because the annuity’s present valueis a cost and therefore a cash outflow.
A B
period, we discount each annuity due cash flow 1 fewer period than an ordinary annuity. The algebraic formula for the present value of an annuity due is
PV0 = aCF0
rb * c1 -
1(1 + r)n d * (1 + r) (5.6)
Notice the similarity between this equation and Equation 5.4. The two equations are identical except that Equation 5.6 uses CF0 to indicate that the first cash flow arrives immediately in an annuity due, and Equation 5.6 has an extra term at the end, (1 + r). The reason for this extra term is the same as when we calculated the future value of the annuity due. In the annuity due, each payment arrives 1 year earlier (compared to the ordinary annuity), so each payment has a higher present value. To be specific, each payment of the annuity due is discounted one less period so it’s worth r% more than each ordinary annuity payment.
We can calculate its present value using a calculator or a spreadsheet.
Calculator use Before using your calculator to find the present value of an annuity due, you must either switch it to BEGIN mode or use the DUE key, depending on the specifics of your calculator. Then, using the inputs shown at the left, you will find the present value of the annuity due to be $3,240.93 (Note: Because we nearly always assume end-of-period cash flows, be sure to switch your calculator back to END mode when you have completed your annuity-due calculations.)
Spreadsheet use The following spreadsheet shows how to calculate the present value of the annuity due.
XMyLab
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Key Equations appear in green boxes throughout the text to help readers identify the most important mathematical relation-ships.
Review Questions appear at the end of each major text section. These questions chal-lenge readers to stop and test their under-standing of key concepts, tools, techniques, and practices before moving on to the next section.
NEW! Some sections have dedicated Excel Review Questions that ask students to dem-onstrate their ability to solve a financial problem using Excel.
210 PART TWO Financial Tools
Comparison of an Annuity Due with an Ordinary Annuity Present Value
The present value of an annuity due is always greater than the present value of an otherwise identical ordinary annuity. We can verify this statement by compar-ing the present values of the Braden Company’s two annuities:
Ordinary annuity = $3,116.28 versus Annuity due = $3,240.93
Because the cash flows of the annuity due occur at the beginning of each period rather than at the end, their present values are greater. If we calculate the per-centage difference in the values of these two annuities, we will find that the annu-ity due is 4% more valuable than the annuity (remember that 4% is the discount rate that Braden uses):
($3,240.93 - $3,116.28) , $3,116.28 = 0.04 = 4,
FINDING THE PRESENT VALUE OF A PERPETUITY
A perpetuity is an annuity with an infinite life. In other words, it is an annuity that never stops providing a cash flow at the end of each year.
A number of business and personal investment decisions involve payouts that occur indefinitely into the future and are therefore excellent applications of the idea of a perpetuity. Fortunately, the calculation for the present value of a perpe-tuity is one of the easiest in finance. If a perpetuity pays an annual cash flow of CF1, starting 1 year from now, the present value of the cash flow stream is
PV0 = CF1 , r (5.7)
Ross Clark wishes to endow a chair in finance at his alma mater. In other words, Ross wants to make a lump sum dona-
tion today that will provide an annual stream of cash flows to the university forever. The university indicated that the annual cash flow required to support an endowed chair is $400,000 and that it will invest money Ross donates today in assets earning a 5% return. If Ross wants to give money today so that the university will begin receiving annual cash flows next year, how large must his contribution be? To deter-mine the amount Ross must give the university to fund the chair, we must calculate the present value of a $400,000 perpetuity discounted at 5%. Using Equation 5.7, we can determine that this present value is $8 million when the interest rate is 5%:
PV0 = $400,000 , 0.05 = $8,000,000
In other words, to generate $400,000 every year for an indefinite period requires $8,000,000 today if Ross Clark’s alma mater can earn 5% on its investments. If the university earns 5% interest annually on the $8,000,000, it can withdraw $400,000 per year indefinitely without ever touching the original $800,000 donation.
Many financial applications require analysts to calculate the present value of a cash flow stream that continues forever (i.e., a perpetuity) and grows at a steady rate. Calculating the present value of a growing perpetuity is not much more com-plicated than finding the present value of a level perpetuity. For a cash flow stream
perpetuityAn annuity with an infinite life, providing continual annual cash flow.
PERSONAL FINANCE EXAMPLE 5.11
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CHAPTER 5 Time Value of Money 211
that begins next year, pays an initial cash flow of CF1, and grows after next year at a constant rate g forever, the present value of the growing perpetuity is
PV0 = a CF1
r - gb (5.8)
Equation 5.8 applies only when the discount rate is greater than the growth rate in cash flows (i.e., r > g). If the interest rate is less than or equal to the growth rate, cash flows grow so fast that the present value of the stream is infinite.
Suppose, after consulting with his alma mater, Ross Clark learns that the university requires the endowment to provide
a $400,000 cash flow next year, but subsequent annual cash flows must grow by 2% per year to keep up with inflation. How much does Ross need to donate today to cover this requirement? Plugging the relevant values into Equation 5.8, we have:
PV0 =$400,000
0.05 - 0.02= $13,333,333
Compared to the level perpetuity providing $400,000 per year, the growing perpetuity requires Ross to make a much larger initial donation, $13.3 million versus $8 million.
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS MyLab Finance Solutions 5–10 What is the difference between an ordinary annuity and an annuity
due? Which is more valuable? Why? 5–11 What are the most efficient ways to calculate the present value of an
ordinary annuity? 5–12 How can the formula for the future value of an annuity be modified to
find the future value of an annuity due? 5–13 How can the formula for the present value of an ordinary annuity be
modified to find the present value of an annuity due? 5–14 What is a perpetuity? Why is the present value of a perpetuity equal to
the annual cash payment divided by the interest rate? Why doesn’t this chapter provide an equation showing you how to calculate the future value of a perpetuity?
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS MyLab Finance Solutions 5–15 Because tax time comes around every year, you smartly decide to make
equal contributions to your IRA at the end of every year. Using the information provided at MyLab Finance, calculate the future value of your IRA contributions when you retire.
5–16 You have just graduated from college and begun your new career, and now it is time to buy your first home. Using the information provided at MyLab Finance, determine how much you can spend for your new dream home.
PERSONAL FINANCE EXAMPLE 5.12
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204 PART TWO Financial Tools
FINDING THE FUTURE VALUE OF AN ORDINARY ANNUITY
One way to find the future value of an ordinary annuity is to calculate the future value of each cash flow and then add up those figures. Fortunately, several short-cuts lead to the answer. You can calculate the future value after n years of an ordinary annuity that makes n annual cash payments equal to CF1 by using Equation 5.3:
FVn = CF1 * e 3(1 + r)n - 14r
f (5.3)
As before, in this equation r represents the interest rate, and n represents the number of payments in the annuity (or, equivalently, the number of years over which the annuity is spread). The subscript 1 on the term CF1 highlights that with an ordinary annuity, the first payment comes after 1 year (or, more gener-ally, after 1 period). The calculations required to find the future value of an ordi-nary annuity are illustrated in the following example.
Fran Abrams wishes to determine how much money she will have after 5 years if she chooses annuity A, the ordi-
nary annuity. She will deposit the $1,000 annual payments that the annuity pro-vides at the end of each of the next 5 years into a savings account paying 7% annual interest. This situation is depicted on the following timeline.
PERSONAL FINANCE EXAMPLE 5.7
MyLab Finance Animation
IRF
Timeline for future value of an ordinary annuity ($1,000 end-of-year deposit, earning 7%, after 5 years) $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000
0 1 2 3 4 5
$1,000.001,070.001,144.901,225.041,310.80
$5,750.74 Future Value
Year
As the figure shows, after 5 years, Fran will have $5,750.74 in her account. Note that because she makes deposits at the end of the year, the first deposit will earn interest for 4 years, the second for 3 years, and so on. Plugging the relevant val-ues into Equation 5.3, we have
FV5 = $1,000 * e 3(1 + 0.07)5 - 140.07
f = $5,750.74
Calculator use Using the calculator inputs shown at the left, you can confirm that the future value of the ordinary annuity equals $5,750.74. In this example, we enter the $1,000 annuity payment as a negative value, which in turn causes the calculator to report the resulting future value as a positive value. You can think of each $1,000 deposit that Fran makes into her investment account as
MyLab Finance Financial Calculator
PMTI/YNCPTFV
SolutionCPT RCL ENTER CPT CPTCF NPV IRR DEL INSN I/Y PV
7
4
1
0
8
5
2
.
9
6
3
=
/
*–
+
PMT FVC/Y
C/CE
+/–
1/xy x
P/Y xP/Y BGN AMORT
RESET
Input
57
–1000Function
5,750.74
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xxxii Preface
Personal Finance Examples demonstrate how students can apply managerial finance concepts, tools, and techniques to their personal financial decisions.
MyLab Finance contains additional resources to demonstrate the examples. The MyLab Financial Calculator reference indicates that the reader can use the finance calculator tool in MyLab Finance to find the solution for an example by inputting the keystrokes shown in the calculator screenshot. The MyLab Finance Solution Video reference indicates that the reader can go to MyLab Finance to watch a video of the author discussing or solving the example. The MyLab Finance Video reference indicates that the reader can watch a video on related core topical areas.
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CHAPTER 5 Time Value of Money 221
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS MyLab Finance Solutions 5–20 What effect does compounding interest more frequently than
annually have on (a) future value and (b) the effective annual rate (EAR)? Why?
5–21 How does the future value of a deposit subject to continuous com-pounding compare to the value obtained by annual compounding?
5–22 Differentiate between a nominal annual rate and an effective annual rate (EAR). Define annual percentage rate (APR) and annual percent-age yield (APY).
Was the Deal for Manhattan a Swindle?
FOCUS ON ETHICS in practice
Most schoolchildren marvel when hearing Manhattan was purchased for a song in 1626. As the story goes, Peter Minuit of the Dutch West India Company gave the Lenape Native Americans beads and trinkets worth a mere $24 for the island.
But wait. A letter written by Dutch merchant, Pieter Schage, on Novem-ber 5, 1626 to the directors of the Dutch West India Company confirmed the transaction but valued the goods (which more likely were kettles, mus-kets, powder, and axes) at 60 Dutch guilders. According to the Interna-tional Institute of Social History, 60 Dutch guilders in 1626 are worth
about 787 Euros today after adjusting for inflation. Based on the recent exchange rate between the Euro and the U.S. dollar, that translates to about $871. Now, the deal looks a bit better for the Lenape. But the surface area of Manhattan comprises 636,000 square feet, and condos there sell for an average of $1,700 per square foot. So even after adjusting for price changes since 1626, Minuit still looks pretty sly.
Before closing the case, consider one more factor. The average annual-ized return on U.S. stocks over the last 200 years was 6.6%. If 60 Dutch guil-ders were invested at 6.6% from 1626
to today, the sum would grow to roughly 4 trillion guilders or $2 trillion. Based on New York City’s Depart-ment of Finance property tax assess-ments, $2 trillion is roughly twice the value of all New York City real estate today!
Of course, when the deal for Manhattan was struck, the first asset trading of any kind on a street called Wall lay over 80 years in the future, so the Lenape could not salt the receipts away in stocks. Still, the illustration makes the larger point––compounding is a magical thing! And given this magic, it is less clear who fleeced whom.
People without finance training often fail to appreciate the power of compound interest. Consider the following data for a typical credit card:
Outstanding Balance: $5,000Annual Percentage Rate (APR): 12%Minimum Payment: Larger of [(1% + APR>12) * balance] or $25
Minimum Payment Only $100 Payment Each Month
Monthly Payments to Zero Balance 208 71Total Interest Paid $4,242 $1,993
The first minimum payment is $100, but that minimum will decline each month as the outstanding balance shrinks. Making the minimum payment every month means that the borrower takes 17 years to pay off the card, paying more than $4,000 in interest along the way. By paying $100 each month, however, the borrower repays the debt in one-third the time and at less than half the interest cost.
How much responsibility do lenders have to educate borrowers? Does the fact that the government requires dis-closure statements with a few standardized examples illustrating the time value of money change your answer?
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514 PART SIX Long-Term Financial Decisions
Substituting Q = 1,000, P = $10, VC = $5, and FC = $2,500 into Equation 12.5 gives us
DOL at 1,000 units =1,000 * ($10 - $5)
1,000 * ($10 - $5) - $2,500=
$5,000$2,500
= 2.0
As before, the DOL value of 2.0 means that at Cheryl’s Posters a change in sales volume results in an EBIT change that is twice as large in percentage terms.6
See the Focus on Practice box for a discussion of operating leverage at the semiconductor company Qualcomm.
EXAMPLE 12.6
6. When total revenue in dollars from sales—instead of unit sales—is available, the following equation, in which TR = total revenue in dollars at a base level of sales and TVC = total variable operating costs in dollars, can be used:
DOL at base dollar sales TR =TR - TVC
TR - TVC - FC
This formula is especially useful for finding the DOL for multiproduct firms. It should be clear that because in the case of a single-product firm, TR = Q * P and TVC = Q * VC, substitution of these values into Equation 12.5 results in the equation given here.
Qualcomm’s Leverage
FOCUS ON PRACTICE in practice
Item FY2011 FY2012 FY2013 FY2014 FY2015 FY2016
Sales revenue (millions) $14,566 $19,121 $24,866 $26,487 $25,281 $23,554EBIT (millions) $4,882 $5,705 $7,561 $8,034 $7,212 $6,269(1) Percent change in sales 32.4% 31.4% 30.0% 6.5% -4.6% -6.8%(2) Percent change in EBIT 48.6% 16.8% 32.5% 6.2% -10.2% -13.1%DOL [(2) , (1)] 1.5 0.5 1.1 1.0 2.2 1.9
Qualcomm Inc., one of the largest semiconductor companies in the United States, designs and sells wire-less telecommunications chips. Unlike some other chip manufacturers, such as Intel, Qualcomm is largely a fabless company, meaning that it does not own and operate its own fabrication (i.e., manufacturing) plants, but rather outsources the production of the devices it sells to third parties. This strategy makes Qualcomm’s fixed costs lower than those of other firms that manufacture their own products.
Even so, some of Qualcomm’s costs are fixed. The company invests heavily in research and development, and it incurs those costs well before it knows what the demand for new devices will be. In addition, Qualcomm’s labor force, numbering roughly 30,000
employees, is highly skilled. Many of the company’s workers have advanced degrees in technical fields such as elec-trical engineering. Although we often think of labor as a variable cost, most companies do not lay off their most skilled workers due to a temporary decline in sales. Thus, at least some of Qualcomm’s payroll is best considered a fixed cost, at least in the short run.
To what extent do Qualcomm’s fixed costs give the company operat-ing leverage? As demonstrated in the following table, the company experi-enced sales increases in every year from 2011 to 2014, but the percentage increase in EBIT was significantly greater than the gain in sales only in 2011. From 2012 to 2014, Qualcomm’s degree of operating leverage hovered at or below 1.0, prompting some Wall
Street analysts to question why the company was not able to increase its profits faster during a period of rapid sales gains. In 2015 and 2016, Qual-comm fell behind the leading edge of technology, and some of its core chips for cell phones were no longer com-petitive. As a result, sales fell in 2 con-secutive years, and EBIT fell even faster. In 2015 and 2016, Qualcomm’s degree of operating leverage roughly doubled what it had been in the previ-ous 4 years. Qualcomm experienced the downside of operating leverage in 2015 and 2016 without benefiting from it in the previous years when sales were on the rise.
Summarize the pros and cons of operating leverage.
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Preface xxxiii
In Practice boxes offer insights into impor-tant topics in managerial finance through the experiences of real companies, both large and small. There are two categories of In Practice boxes:
Focus on Ethics boxes help readers under-stand and appreciate important ethical issues and problems related to managerial finance. Nearly all of these boxes are brand new in this edition, and those that are not brand new have been substantially revised.
Focus on Practice boxes take a corporate focus that relates a business event or situation to a specific financial concept or technique.
Both types of In Practice boxes end with one or more critical thinking questions to help readers broaden the lesson from the content of the box.
The end-of-chapter Summary con-sists of two sections. The first sec-tion, Focus on Value, explains how the chapter’s content relates to the firm’s goal of maximizing owner wealth. This feature helps reinforce understanding of the link between the financial manager’s actions and share value.
The second part of the Summary, the Review of Learning Goals, restates each learning goal and summarizes the key material that was presented to support mastery of the goal. This review provides students with an opportunity to reconcile what they have learned with the learning goal and to con-firm their understanding before moving forward.
230 PART TWO Financial Tools
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS MyLab Finance Solutions 5–26 How can you determine the size of the equal, end-of-year deposits nec-
essary to accumulate a certain future sum at the end of a specified future period at a given annual interest rate?
5–27 Describe the procedure used to amortize a loan into a series of equal periodic payments.
5–28 How can you determine the unknown number of periods when you know the present and future values—single amount or annuity—and the applicable rate of interest?
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS MyLab Finance Solutions 5–29 You want to buy a new car as a graduation present for yourself, but
before finalizing a purchase you need to consider the monthly payment amount. Using the information provided at MyLab Finance, find the monthly payment amount for the car you are considering.
5–30 As a finance major, you realize that you can quickly estimate your retirement age by knowing how much you need to retire, how much you can contribute each month to your retirement account, and what rate of return you can earn on your retirement investments. With that information, you can solve for the number of years it will take to save the money you need to retire. Using the information provided at MyLab Finance, estimate the age at which you will be able to retire.
FOCUS ON VALUE
The time value of money is an important tool that financial managers and other market participants use to compare cash inflows and outflows occurring at dif-ferent times. Because firms routinely make investments that produce cash inflows over long periods of time, the effective application of time-value-of-money techniques is extremely important. These techniques enable financial managers to compare the costs of investments they make today to the cash inflows those investments will generate in future years. Such comparisons help managers achieve the firm’s overall goal of share price maximization. It will become clear later in this text that the application of time-value techniques is a key part of the valuation process needed to make wealth-maximizing decisions.
REVIEW OF LEARNING GOALS
LG 1 Discuss the role of time value in finance, the use of computational tools, and the basic patterns of cash flow. Financial managers and investors use time-value-of-money techniques when assessing the value of expected cash flow streams. Alternatives can be assessed by either compounding to find future value or discounting to find present value. Financial managers rely primarily on present-value techniques. Financial calculators and electronic spreadsheets
SUMMARY
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230 PART TWO Financial Tools
➔ REVIEW QUESTIONS MyLab Finance Solutions 5–26 How can you determine the size of the equal, end-of-year deposits nec-
essary to accumulate a certain future sum at the end of a specified future period at a given annual interest rate?
5–27 Describe the procedure used to amortize a loan into a series of equal periodic payments.
5–28 How can you determine the unknown number of periods when you know the present and future values—single amount or annuity—and the applicable rate of interest?
➔ EXCEL REVIEW QUESTIONS MyLab Finance Solutions 5–29 You want to buy a new car as a graduation present for yourself, but
before finalizing a purchase you need to consider the monthly payment amount. Using the information provided at MyLab Finance, find the monthly payment amount for the car you are considering.
5–30 As a finance major, you realize that you can quickly estimate your retirement age by knowing how much you need to retire, how much you can contribute each month to your retirement account, and what rate of return you can earn on your retirement investments. With that information, you can solve for the number of years it will take to save the money you need to retire. Using the information provided at MyLab Finance, estimate the age at which you will be able to retire.
FOCUS ON VALUE
The time value of money is an important tool that financial managers and other market participants use to compare cash inflows and outflows occurring at dif-ferent times. Because firms routinely make investments that produce cash inflows over long periods of time, the effective application of time-value-of-money techniques is extremely important. These techniques enable financial managers to compare the costs of investments they make today to the cash inflows those investments will generate in future years. Such comparisons help managers achieve the firm’s overall goal of share price maximization. It will become clear later in this text that the application of time-value techniques is a key part of the valuation process needed to make wealth-maximizing decisions.
REVIEW OF LEARNING GOALS
LG 1 Discuss the role of time value in finance, the use of computational tools, and the basic patterns of cash flow. Financial managers and investors use time-value-of-money techniques when assessing the value of expected cash flow streams. Alternatives can be assessed by either compounding to find future value or discounting to find present value. Financial managers rely primarily on present-value techniques. Financial calculators and electronic spreadsheets
SUMMARY
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Comprehensive Problems, keyed to the learning goals, are longer and more complex than the Warm-Up Exercises. In this section, instruc-tors will find multiple problems that address the important concepts, tools, and techniques in the chapter.
New! Excel templates for many end-of-chapter problems are available in MyLab Finance. These templates do not solve problems for students, but rather help students reach a solution faster by inputting data for them or by organizing facts presented in problems in a logical way.
A short descriptor identifies the essential concept or technique of the problem. Problems labeled as Integrative tie together related topics.
176 PART TWO Financial Tools
WARM-UP EXERCISES All problems are available in MyLab Finance
LG 2 E4–1 The installed cost of a new computerized controller was $65,000. Calculate the depreciation schedule by year assuming a recovery period of 5 years and using the appropriate MACRS depreciation percentages given in Table 4.2.
LG 3 E4–2 Classify the following changes in each of the accounts as either an inflow or an out-flow of cash. During the year (a) marketable securities increased, (b) land and build-ings decreased, (c) accounts payable increased, (d) vehicles decreased, (e) accounts receivable increased, and (f) dividends were paid.
LG 3 E4–3 Determine the operating cash flow (OCF) for Kleczka Inc., based on the following data. (All values are in thousands of dollars.) During the year the firm had sales of $2,500, cost of goods sold totaled $1,800, operating expenses totaled $300, and depreciation expenses were $200. The firm is in the 35% tax bracket.
LG 3 E4–4 During the year, Xero Inc. experienced an increase in net fixed assets of $300,000 and had depreciation of $200,000. It also experienced an increase in current assets of $150,000 and an increase in accounts payable and accruals of $75,000. If operat-ing cash flow (OCF) for the year was $700,000, calculate the firm’s free cash flow (FCF) for the year.
LG 5 E4–5 Rimier Corp. forecasts sales of $650,000 for 2020. Assume that the firm has fixed costs of $250,000 and variable costs amounting to 35% of sales. Operating expenses are estimated to include fixed costs of $28,000 and a variable portion equal to 7.5% of sales. Interest expenses for the coming year are estimated to be $20,000. Estimate Rimier’s net profits before taxes for 2020.
LG 2 P4–1 Depreciation On March 20, 2019, Norton Systems acquired two new assets. Asset A was research equipment costing $17,000 and having a 3-year recovery period. Asset B was duplicating equipment with an installed cost of $45,000 and a 5-year recovery period. Using the MACRS depreciation percentages in Table 4.2, prepare a depreciation schedule for each of these assets.
LG 2 P4–2 Depreciation In early 2019, Sosa Enterprises purchased a new machine for $10,000 to make cork stoppers for wine bottles. The machine has a 3-year recovery period and is expected to have a salvage value of $2,000. Develop a depreciation schedule for this asset using the MACRS depreciation percentages in Table 4.2.
LG 2 P4–3 MACRS depreciation expense and accounting cash flow Pavlovich Instruments Inc., a maker of precision telescopes, expects to report pretax income of $430,000 this year. The company’s financial manager is considering the timing of a purchase of new computerized lens grinders. The grinders will have an installed cost of $80,000 and a cost recovery period of 5 years. They will be depreciated using the MACRS schedule.
LG 3
PROBLEMS All problems are available in MyLab Finance. The X
MyLab icon indicates problems in Excel format available in MyLab Finance.
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CHAPTER 4 Long- and Short-Term Financial Planning 185
Peabody & Peabody Balance Sheet December 31, 2019 ($000)
Assets Liabilities and stockholders’ equity
Cash $ 400 Accounts payable $1,400
Marketable securities 200 Accruals 400
Accounts receivable 1,200 Other current liabilities 80
Inventories 1,800 Total current liabilities $1,880
Total current assets $3,600 Long-term debt 2,000
Net fixed assets 4,000 Total liabilities $3,880
Total assets $7,600 Common equity 3,720
Total liabilities and
stockholders’ equity $7,600
a. Prepare a pro forma balance sheet dated December 31, 2021.b. Discuss the financing changes suggested by the statement prepared in part a.
LG 5 P4–20 Integrative: Pro forma statements Red Queen Restaurants wishes to prepare finan-cial plans. Use the financial statements and the other information provided below to prepare the financial plans.
The following financial data are also available: (1) The firm has estimated that its sales for 2020 will be $900,000. (2) The firm expects to pay $35,000 in cash dividends in 2020. (3) The firm wishes to maintain a minimum cash balance of $30,000. (4) Accounts receivable represent approximately 18% of annual sales. (5) The firm’s ending inventory will change directly with changes in sales in
2020. (6) A new machine costing $42,000 will be purchased in 2020. Total depreciation
for 2020 will be $17,000. (7) Accounts payable will change directly in response to changes in sales in 2020. (8) Taxes payable will equal one-fourth of the tax liability on the pro forma income
statement. (9) Marketable securities, other current liabilities, long-term debt, and common
stock will remain unchanged.a. Prepare a pro forma income statement for the year ended December 31, 2020,
using the percent-of-sales method.b. Prepare a pro forma balance sheet dated December 31, 2020, using the judgmen-
tal approach.c. Analyze these statements, and discuss the resulting external financing
required.
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232 PART TWO Financial Tools
The chapter opener described a lottery prize that could be taken as a $480 million lump sum payment or mixed stream of 30 payments, with the first payment of $11.42 million coming immediately, followed by 29 additional payments growing at 5% per year. If the lottery winner could earn 2% on cash invested today, should she take the lump sum or the mixed stream? What if the rate of return is 3%? What general principle do those calculations illustrate?
OPENER-IN-REVIEW
LG 2 LG 5 ST5–1 Future values for various compounding frequencies Delia Martin has $10,000 that she can deposit in any of three savings accounts for a 3-year period. Bank A com-pounds interest on an annual basis, bank B compounds interest twice each year, and bank C compounds interest each quarter. All three banks have a stated annual interest rate of 4%.a. What amount would Ms. Martin have after 3 years, leaving all interest paid on
deposit, in each bank?b. What effective annual rate (EAR) would she earn in each of the banks?c. On the basis of your findings in parts a and b, which bank should Ms. Martin
deal with? Why?d. If a fourth bank (bank D), also with a 4% stated interest rate, compounds
interest continuously, how much would Ms. Martin have after 3 years? Does this alternative change your recommendation in part c? Explain why or why not.
LG 3 ST5–2 Future values of annuities Ramesh Abdul has the opportunity to invest in either of two annuities, each of which will cost $38,000 today. Annuity X is an annuity due that makes 6 cash payments of $9,000. Annuity Y is an ordinary annuity that makes 6 cash payments of $10,000. Assume that Ramesh can earn 15% on his investments.a. On a purely intuitive basis (i.e., without doing any math), which annuity do you
think is more attractive? Why?b. Find the future value after 6 years for both annuities.c. Use your finding in part b to indicate which annuity is more attractive. Why?
Compare your finding to your intuitive response in part a.
LG 2 LG 3 ST5–3 Present values of single amounts and streams You have a choice of accepting either of two 5-year cash flow streams or single amounts. One cash flow stream is an ordi-nary annuity, and the other is a mixed stream. You may accept alternative A or B, either as a cash flow stream or as a single amount. Given the cash flow stream and single amounts associated with each (see the following table), and assuming a 9% opportunity cost, which alternative (A or B) and in which form (cash flow stream or single amount) would you prefer?
IRF
LG 4
IRF
SELF-TEST PROBLEMS (Solutions in Appendix)
IRF
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CHAPTER 5 Time Value of Money 233
LG 6 ST5–4 Deposits needed to accumulate a future sum Judi Janson wishes to accumulate $8,000 by making equal, end-of-year deposits over the next 5 years. If Judi can earn 7% on her investments, how much must she deposit at the end of each year to meet this goal?
IRF
Year Savings estimate
1 $35,000
2 50,000
3 45,000
4 25,000
5 15,000
Cash flow stream
Year Alternative A Alternative B
1 $700 $1,100
2 700 900
3 700 700
4 700 500
5 700 300
Single amount
At time zero $2,825 $2,800
LG 2 E5–1 Assume that a firm makes a $2,500 deposit into a short-term investment account. If this account is currently paying 0.7% (yes, that’s right, less than 1%!), what will the account balance be after 1 year?
LG 2 LG 5 E5–2 If Bob and Judy combine their savings of $1,260 and $975, respectively, and deposit this amount into an account that pays 2% annual interest, compounded monthly, what will the account balance be after 4 years?
LG 3 E5–3 Gabrielle just won $2.5 million in the state lottery. She is given the option of receiving a lump sum of $1.3 million now, or she can elect to receive $100,000 at the end of each of the next 25 years. If Gabrielle can earn 5% annually on her investments, which option should she take?
LG 4 E5–4 Your firm has the option of making an investment in new software that will cost $130,000 today but will save the company money over several years. You estimate that the software will provide the savings shown in the following table over its 5-year life.
WARM-UP EXERCISES All problems are available in MyLab Finance.
Should the firm make this investment if it requires a minimum annual return of 9% on all investments?
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xxxiv Preface
Self-Test Problems, keyed to the learning goals, give readers an opportunity to strengthen their understanding of topics by doing a sample problem. For reinforce-ment, solutions to the Self-Test Problems appear in the appendix at the back of the book. An IRF icon indicates that the Self-Test Problem can be solved using the interest rate factors. The reader can access the Interest Rate Factor Supplement in MyLab Finance.
Warm-Up Exercises follow the Self-Test Problems. These short, numerical exercises give students practice in applying tools and tech-niques presented in the chapter.
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CHAPTER 4 Long- and Short-Term Financial Planning 179
LG 4 P4–8 Cash receipts A firm has actual sales of $65,000 in April and $60,000 in May. It expects sales of $70,000 in June and $100,000 in July and in August. Assuming that sales are the only source of cash inflows and that half of them are for cash and the remainder are collected evenly over the following 2 months, what are the firm’s expected cash receipts for June, July, and August?
LG 4 P4–9 Cash disbursements schedule Maris Brothers Inc. needs a cash disbursement sched-ule for the months of April, May, and June. Use the format of Table 4.9 and the fol-lowing information in its preparation.
Sales: February = $500,000; March = $500,000; April = $560,000; May = $610,000; June = $650,000; July = $650,000
Purchases: Purchases are calculated as 60% of the next month’s sales, 10% of purchases are made in cash, 50% of purchases are paid for 1 month after pur-chase, and the remaining 40% of purchases are paid for 2 months after purchase.
Rent: The firm pays rent of $8,000 per month.
Wages and salaries: Base wage and salary costs are fixed at $6,000 per month plus a variable cost of 7% of the current month’s sales.
Taxes: A tax payment of $54,500 is due in June.
Fixed asset outlays: New equipment costing $75,000 will be bought and paid for in April.
Interest payments: An interest payment of $30,000 is due in June.
Cash dividends: Dividends of $12,500 will be paid in April.
Principal repayments and retirements: No principal repayments or retirements are due during these months.
LG 4 P4–10 Cash budget: Basic Grenoble Enterprises had sales of $50,000 in March and $60,000 in April. Forecast sales for May, June, and July are $70,000, $80,000, and $100,000, respectively. The firm has a cash balance of $5,000 on May 1 and wishes to maintain a minimum cash balance of $5,000. Given the following data, prepare and interpret a cash budget for the months of May, June, and July.
(1) The firm makes 20% of sales for cash, 60% are collected in the next month, and the remaining 20% are collected in the second month following sale.
(2) The firm receives other income of $2,000 per month. (3) The firm’s actual or expected purchases, all made for cash, are $50,000,
$70,000, and $80,000 for the months of May through July, respectively. (4) Rent is $3,000 per month. (5) Wages and salaries are 10% of the previous month’s sales. (6) Cash dividends of $3,000 will be paid in June. (7) Payment of principal and interest of $4,000 is due in June. (8) A cash purchase of equipment costing $6,000 is scheduled in July. (9) Taxes of $6,000 are due in June.
Personal Finance Problem
LG 4 P4–11 Preparation of cash budget Sam and Suzy Sizeman need to prepare a cash budget for the last quarter of 2020 to make sure they can cover their expenditures during the period. Sam and Suzy have been preparing budgets for the past several years and have been able to identify the percentage of their income that they pay for most of
XMyLab
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CHAPTER 4 Long- and Short-Term Financial Planning 187
Provincial Imports Inc. Balance Sheet December 31, 2019
Assets Liabilities and stockholders’ equity
Cash $ 200,000 Accounts payable $ 700,000
Marketable securities 225,000 Taxes payable 95,000
Accounts receivable 625,000 Notes payable 200,000
Inventories 500,000 Other current liabilities 5,000
Total current assets $1,550,000 Total current liabilities $1,000,000
Net fixed assets 1,400,000 Long-term debt 500,000
Total assets $2,950,000 Total liabilities $1,500,000
Common stock 75,000
Retained earnings 1,375,000
Total liabilities and equity $2,950,000
Information related to financial projections for the year 2020 is as follows: (1) Projected sales are $6,000,000. (2) Cost of goods sold in 2019 includes $1,000,000 in fixed costs. (3) Operating expense in 2019 includes $250,000 in fixed costs. (4) Interest expense will remain unchanged. (5) The firm will pay cash dividends amounting to 40% of net profits after taxes. (6) Cash and inventories will double. (7) Marketable securities, notes payable, long-term debt, and common stock will
remain unchanged. (8) Accounts receivable, accounts payable, and other current liabilities will change
in direct response to the change in sales. (9) A new computer system costing $356,000 will be purchased during the year.
Total depreciation expense for the year will be $110,000. (10) The tax rate will remain at 40%.
a. Prepare a pro forma income statement for the year ended December 31, 2020, using the fixed cost data given to improve the accuracy of the percent-of-sales method.
b. Prepare a pro forma balance sheet as of December 31, 2020, using the informa-tion given and the judgmental approach. Include a reconciliation of the retained earnings account.
c. Analyze these statements, and discuss the resulting external financing required.
LG 1 P4–22 ETHICS PROBLEM The SEC is trying to get companies to notify the investment community more quickly when a “material change” will affect their forthcoming financial results. In what sense might a financial manager be seen as “more ethical” if he or she follows this directive and issues a press release indicating that sales will not be as high as previously anticipated?
You have been assigned the task of putting together a statement for the ACME Com-pany that shows its expected inflows and outflows of cash over the months of July 2020 through December 2020.
SPREADSHEET EXERCISE
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CHAPTER 4 Long- and Short-Term Financial Planning 187
Provincial Imports Inc. Balance Sheet December 31, 2019
Assets Liabilities and stockholders’ equity
Cash $ 200,000 Accounts payable $ 700,000
Marketable securities 225,000 Taxes payable 95,000
Accounts receivable 625,000 Notes payable 200,000
Inventories 500,000 Other current liabilities 5,000
Total current assets $1,550,000 Total current liabilities $1,000,000
Net fixed assets 1,400,000 Long-term debt 500,000
Total assets $2,950,000 Total liabilities $1,500,000
Common stock 75,000
Retained earnings 1,375,000
Total liabilities and equity $2,950,000
Information related to financial projections for the year 2020 is as follows: (1) Projected sales are $6,000,000. (2) Cost of goods sold in 2019 includes $1,000,000 in fixed costs. (3) Operating expense in 2019 includes $250,000 in fixed costs. (4) Interest expense will remain unchanged. (5) The firm will pay cash dividends amounting to 40% of net profits after taxes. (6) Cash and inventories will double. (7) Marketable securities, notes payable, long-term debt, and common stock will
remain unchanged. (8) Accounts receivable, accounts payable, and other current liabilities will change
in direct response to the change in sales. (9) A new computer system costing $356,000 will be purchased during the year.
Total depreciation expense for the year will be $110,000. (10) The tax rate will remain at 40%.
a. Prepare a pro forma income statement for the year ended December 31, 2020, using the fixed cost data given to improve the accuracy of the percent-of-sales method.
b. Prepare a pro forma balance sheet as of December 31, 2020, using the informa-tion given and the judgmental approach. Include a reconciliation of the retained earnings account.
c. Analyze these statements, and discuss the resulting external financing required.
LG 1 P4–22 ETHICS PROBLEM The SEC is trying to get companies to notify the investment community more quickly when a “material change” will affect their forthcoming financial results. In what sense might a financial manager be seen as “more ethical” if he or she follows this directive and issues a press release indicating that sales will not be as high as previously anticipated?
You have been assigned the task of putting together a statement for the ACME Com-pany that shows its expected inflows and outflows of cash over the months of July 2020 through December 2020.
SPREADSHEET EXERCISE
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Every chapter includes a Spreadsheet Exercise. This exercise gives students an opportunity to use Excel software to create one or more spreadsheets with which to analyze a financial problem. The spreadsheet to be created is often modeled on a table or Excel screenshot located in the chapter. Students can access working versions of the Excel screenshots in MyLab Finance.
Preface xxxv
Personal Finance Problems specifi-cally relate to personal finance situa-tions and Personal Finance Examples in each chapter. These problems will help students see how they can apply the tools and techniques of manage-rial finance in managing their own finances.
All exercises and problems are avail-able in MyLab Finance.
MyLab FINANCE
Reach Every Student by Pairing This Text with MyLab FinanceMyLab is the teaching and learning platform that empowers you to reach every student. By combining trusted author content with digital tools and a flexible plat-form, MyLab personalizes the learning experience and improves results for each student. Learn more about MyLab Finance at www.pearson.com/mylab/finance.
Deliver Trusted ContentYou deserve teaching materials that meet your own high standards for your course. That’s why Pearson partners with highly respected authors to develop interactive content and course-specific resources that you can trust—and that keep your students engaged.
Empower Each LearnerEach student learns at a different pace. Personalized learning pinpoints the pre-cise areas where each student needs practice, giving all students the support they need—when and where they need it—to be successful.
Teach Your Course Your WayYour course is unique. So whether you’d like to build your own assignments, teach multiple sections, or set prerequisites, MyLab gives you the flexibility to easily create your course to fit your needs.
Improve Student ResultsWhen you teach with MyLab, student performance improves. That’s why instruc-tors have chosen MyLab for over 15 years, touching the lives of over 50 million students.
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MyLab opens the door to a powerful Web-based tutorial, testing, and diagnostic learning system designed specifically for the Zutter/Smart, Principles of Managerial Finance, Brief Edition. With MyLab, instructors can select an adaptable preconfig-ured course or create their own. Both options allow instructors to create, edit, and assign online homework, quizzes, and tests and track all student progress in the down-loadable online gradebook. MyLab allows students to supplement and reinforce their in-class learning by taking advantage of a progress-driven Study Plan or self-selected practice problems, quizzes, and tests. For example, all end-of-chapter problems are assignable by instructors or selectable by students in MyLab, and because the prob-lems have algorithmically generated values, no student will have the same homework as another or work the same problem twice; there is an unlimited opportunity for practice and testing. Students get the help they need, when they need it, from the robust tutorial options, including “View an Example” and “Help Me Solve This,” which breaks the problem into steps and links to the relevant textbook page.
This fully integrated online system gives students the hands-on tutorial, prac-tice, and diagnostic help they need to ensure they are effectively learning finance in the most efficient manner. Utilization of the resources available in MyLab Finance saves instructors time by enabling students to more effectively learn on their own and providing instructors with a full account of student progress, auto grading, and an online gradebook that can seamlessly link with a Learning Management System (e.g., Blackboard Learn, Brightspace by D2L, Canvas, or Moodle) or be downloaded to Excel.
The Multimedia Library in MyLab Finance provides students with access to a variety of chapter resources all intended to reinforce their learning and understanding of the textbook content. For example, students can access a Chapter Introduction Video for every chapter and dozens of Solution Videos for select in-chapter examples. Students can also access dynamic animations for select figures and examples throughout the book that provide them with the ability to control inputs and drive outputs to better understand the concepts.
The auto-graded Excel feature in MyLab Finance allows instructors to assign all Spreadsheet Exercises and select end-of-chapter problems without having to manually grade spreadsheets. Students have the opportunity to practice important finance skills in Excel and instructors have the ability to assess their learning without the hassle of time-consuming grading. Students simply download a spreadsheet, solve a finance problem in Excel, and then upload the file back to MyLab Finance. Students will receive personalized feedback on their work within minutes that allows them to pin-point where they went wrong on any step of the problem.
Chapter Cases with automatically graded assessment are also provided in MyLab Finance. These cases have students apply the concepts they have learned to a more complex and realistic situation. These cases help strengthen practical application of financial tools and techniques.
MyLab also has Group Exercises that students can work together in the context of an ongoing company. Each group creates a company and follows it through the various managerial finance topics and business activities presented in the textbook.
MyLab Finance has an Interest Rate Factor Supplement that explains how to use the interest rate factors in time-value-of-money problems and works seam-lessly with the textbook. The student can go directly to the IRF Supplement and see the in-chapter example solved using the interest rate factors. All examples that appear in the IRF Supplement are indicated in the text with an IRF icon.
xxxvi Preface
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CHAPTER 5 Time Value of Money 205
a payment into the account or a cash outflow, and after 5 years the future value is the balance in the account, or the cash inflow that Fran receives as a reward for investing.
Spreadsheet use To calculate the future value of an annuity in Excel, we will use the same future value function that we used to calculate the future value of a lump sum, but we will add two new input values. Recall that the future value function’s syntax is FV(rate,nper,pmt,pv,type). We have already explained the terms rate, nper, and pv in this function. The term pmt refers to the annual pay-ment the annuity offers. The term type is an input that lets Excel know whether the annuity being valued is an ordinary annuity (in which case the input value for type is 0 or omitted) or an annuity due (in which case the correct input value for type is 1). In this particular problem, the input value for pv is 0 because there is no up-front money received that is separate from the annuity. The only cash flows are those that are part of the annuity stream. The following Excel spread-sheet demonstrates how to calculate the future value of the ordinary annuity.
FUTURE VALUE OF AN ORDINARY ANNUITYAnnual annuity paymentAnnual rate of interestNumber of yearsFuture value
12345
–$1,0007%5
$5,750.74
Entry in Cell B5 is =FV(B3,B4,B2,0,0).The minus sign appears before the $1,000
in B2 because the annuity’s paymentsare cash outflows.
A B
FINDING THE PRESENT VALUE OF AN ORDINARY ANNUITY
Quite often in finance, we need to find the present value of a stream of cash flows spread over several future periods. An annuity is, of course, a stream of equal periodic cash flows. The method for finding the present value of an ordi-nary annuity is similar to the method just discussed. One approach is to calculate the present value of each cash flow in the annuity and then add up those present values. Alternatively, the algebraic shortcut for finding the present value of an ordinary annuity that makes an annual payment of CF1 for n years looks like
PV0 = aCF1
rb * c1 -
1(1 + r)n d (5.4)
Of course, the simplest approach is to solve problems like this one with a finan-cial calculator or spreadsheet program.
Braden Company, a small producer of plastic toys, wants to determine the most it should pay for a particular ordinary annuity. The annuity consists of cash in flows of $700 at the end of each year for 5 years. The firm requires the annuity to provide a minimum return of 4%. The following timeline depicts this situation.
EXAMPLE 5.8
MyLab Finance Solution VideoMyLab Finance Animation
IRF
XMyLab
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Preface xxxvii
Advanced reporting features in MyLab also allow you to easily report on AACSB accreditation and assessment in just a few clicks.
An online glossary, digital flashcards, financial calculator tutorials, videos, Spreadsheet Use examples from the text in Excel, and numerous other premium resources are available in MyLab.
DEVELOPING EMPLOYABILITY SKILLS
For students to succeed in a rapidly changing job market, they should be aware of their career options and how to go about developing a variety of skills. In this book and in MyLab Finance, we focus on developing these skills in a variety of ways.
Excel modeling skills—Each chapter contains a Spreadsheet Exercise that asks students to build an Excel model to help solve a business problem. Many chapters provide screenshots showing completed Excel models designed to solve in-chapter examples. Many chapters contain Excel Review Questions that prompt students to practice using Excel to solve specific types of problems. In addition, students can access the working Excel screenshots and solutions to the Excel Review Questions in MyLab Finance to further reenforce their learning and understanding. Also, in MyLab students will find dozens of Excel templates, marked in the text with a special icon, that help them model select end-of-chapter problems so they can reach a solution faster and with a deeper understanding of the underlying concepts. Finally, as mentioned above, every Excel Spreadsheet Exercise and select end-of-chapter problems can be assigned and auto graded.
Ethical reasoning skills—The Focus on Ethics boxes describe situations in which business professionals have violated ethical (and in some cases even legal) standards and have suffered consequences as a result. These boxes will help students recognize the ethical temptations they are likely to face while pursuing a finance career and the consequences that they may suffer if they behave unethically. Each chapter ends with an Ethics Problem that asks stu-dents to consider the ethical dimensions of some business decision.
Critical thinking skills—Nearly every significant financial decision requires crit-ical thinking because making optimal decisions means weighing the marginal benefits and costs of alternative plans. To weigh those benefits and costs, one must first iden-tify and quantify them. Nearly every chapter in this textbook discusses how finan-cial analysts place a value on the net benefits associated with a particular decision. Students who master this material will be prepared to ask the tough questions neces-sary to assess whether a particular course of action creates value for shareholders.
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Data analysis skills—Financial work is about data. Financial analysts have to identify the data that are relevant for a particular business problem, and they must know how to process that data in a way that leads to good decision making. In-chapter examples and end-of-chapter problems require students to sort out relevant from irrelevant data and to use the data that they have to make a clear recommendation about what course of action a firm should take.
TABLE OF CONTENTS OVERVIEW
The text’s organization conceptually links the firm’s actions and its value as deter-mined in the financial market. We discuss every significant financial problem or decision in terms of both risk and return to assess the potential impact on owners’ wealth. A Focus on Value element in each chapter’s Summary helps reinforce the student’s understanding of the link between the financial manager’s actions and the firm’s share value.
In organizing each chapter, we have adhered to a managerial decision-making perspective, relating decisions to the firm’s overall goal of wealth maximization. Once a particular concept has been developed, its application is illustrated by an example, which is a hallmark feature of this book. These examples demonstrate, and solidify in the student’s thought, financial decision-making considerations and their consequences.
INSTRUCTOR TEACHING RESOURCES
Supplements available to instructors at www.pearsonhighered.com/irc Features of the Supplement
Instructor’s Manual • Overview of key topics• Detailed answers and solutions to all Opener-In-Review
Questions, Warm-Up Exercises, end-of-chapter Problems, and Chapter Cases
• Suggested answers to all critical thinking questions in chapter boxes, Ethics Problems, and Group Exercises
• Spreadsheet Exercises• Group Exercises• Integrative Cases
Test Bank More than 2,700 multiple-choice, true/false, short-answer, and graphing questions with these annotations:
• Difficulty level (1 for straight recall, 2 for some analysis, 3 for complex analysis)
• Type (Multiple-choice, true/false, short-answer, essay)• Topic (The term or concept the question supports)• Learning outcome• AACSB learning standard (Ethical Understanding and
Reasoning; Analytical Thinking Skills; Information Technol-ogy; Diverse and Multicultural Work; Reflective Thinking; Application of Knowledge)
xxxviii Preface
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Computerized TestGen TestGen allows instructors to:
• Customize, save, and generate classroom tests• Edit, add, or delete questions from the Test Item Files• Analyze test results• Organize a database of tests and student results
PowerPoints Slides include all the figures and tables from the textbook.
PowerPoints meet accessibility standards for students with disabilities. Features include, but are not limited to:
• Keyboard and Screen Reader access• Alternative text for images• High color contrast between background and
foreground colors
Preface xxxix
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Acknowledgments
TO OUR COLLEAGUES, FRIENDS, AND FAMILY
Pearson sought the advice of a great many excellent reviewers, all of whom influ-enced the revisions of this book. The following individuals provided extremely thoughtful and useful comments for the preparation of the eighth edition:
David Bosch, Boyce CollegeThomas Flores, Hawaii Pacific UniversityRodney Hardcastle, Pacific Union CollegeRenata Kochut, SUNY Empire State CollegeChristopher Kubik, Colby-Sawyer College
Our special thanks go to the following individuals who contributed to the manuscript in the current and previous editions:
Saul W. AdelmanM. Fall AininaGary A. AndersonRonald F. AndersonJames M. AndreGene L. AndruscoAntonio ApapDavid A. ArbeitAllen ArkinsSaul H. AuslanderPeter W. BaconRichard E. BallThomas BankstonAlexander BargesCharles BarngroverMichael BeckerOmar BenkatoRobert BensonScott BesleyDouglas S. BibleCharles W. BlackwellRussell L. BlockCalvin M. BoardmanPaul BolsterRobert J. BondiJeffrey A. BornJerry D. BoswellDenis O. BoudreauxKenneth J. BoudreauxThomas J. BoultonWayne BoyetRon BraswellChristopher Brown
William BrunsenSamuel B. BulmashFrancis E. CandaOmer CareyPatrick A. CasabonaJohnny C. ChanRobert ChatfieldK. C. ChenRoger G. ClarkeTerrence M. ClauretieMark CockalingamKent CofoidBoyd D. CollierThomas CookMaurice P. CorriganMike CuddDonnie L. DanielPrabir DattaJoel J. DautenLee E. DavisIrv DeGrawRichard F. DeMongPeter A. DeVitoR. Gordon DippelJames P. D’MelloCarleton DonchessThomas W. DonohueLorna DottsVincent R. DriscollBetty A. DriverDavid R. DurstDwayne O. EberhardtRonald L. Ehresman
Ted EllisF. Barney EnglishGreg FilbeckRoss A. FlahertyRich FortinTimothy J. GallagherGeorge W. GallingerSharon GarrisonGerald D. GayDeborah GiarussoR. H. GilmerAnthony J. GiovinoLawrence J. GitmanMichael GiulianoPhilip W. GlasgoJeffrey W. GlazerJoel GoldRon B. GoldfarbDennis W. GoodwinDavid A. GordonJ. Charles GraniczC. Ramon GriffinReynolds GriffithArthur GuarinoLewell F. GunterMelvin W. HarjuJohn E. HarperPhil HarringtonGeorge F. HarrisGeorge T. HarrisJohn D. HarrisMary HartmanR. Stevenson Hawkey
xl
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Roger G. HehmanHarvey HeinowitzGlenn HendersonRussell H. HerethKathleen T. HevertJ. Lawrence HexterDouglas A. HibbertRoger P. HillLinda C. HittleJames HobanHugh A. HobsonKeith HoweKenneth M. HugginsJerry G. HuntMahmood IslamJames F. JacksonStanley JacobsDale W. JanowskyJeannette R. JesingerNalina JeypalanTimothy E. JohnsonRoger JuchauAshok K. KapoorDaniel J. Kaufman Jr.Joseph K. KielyTerrance E. KingstonRaj K. KohliThomas M. KruegerLawrence KryzanowskiHarry R. KunianskyWilliam R. LaneRichard E. La NearJames LarsenRick LeCompteB. E. LeeScott LeeSuk Hun LeeMichael A. LenarcicA. Joseph LerroThomas J. LieszHao LinAlan LinesLarry LynchChristopher K. MaJames C. MaDilip B. MadanJudy MaeseJames MalletInayat ManglaBala ManiamTimothy A. ManuelBrian MarisDaniel S. MarroneWilliam H. Marsh
John F. MarshallLinda J. MartinStanley A. MartinCharles E. MaxwellTimothy Hoyt McCaugheyLee McClainJay MeiselmanVincent A. MercurioJoseph MessinaJohn B. MitchellDaniel F. MohanCharles MohundroGene P. MorrisEdward A. MosesTarun K. MukherjeeWilliam T. MurphyRandy MyersLance NailDonald A. NastVivian F. NazarG. NewbouldCharles NgassamAlvin NishimotoGary NoreikoDennis T. OfficerKathleen J. OldfatherKathleen F. OppenheimerRichard M. OsborneJerome S. OsteryoungPrasad PadmanabahnRoger R. PalmerDon B. PantonJohn ParkRonda S. PaulBruce C. PayneGerald W. PerrittGladys E. PerryStanley PiascikGregory PierceMary L. PiotrowskiD. Anthony PlathJerry B. PoeGerald A. PogueSuzanne PolleyRonald S. PretekinFran QuinnRich RavichandranDavid RayoneWalter J. ReinhartJack H. ReubensBenedicte ReyesWilliam B. Riley Jr.Ron RizzutoGayle A. Russell
Patricia A. RyanMurray SabrinKanwal S. SachedevaR. Daniel SadlierHadi SalavitabarGary SangerMukunthan
SanthanakrishnanWilliam L. SartorisWilliam SawatskiSteven R. ScheffMichael SchellengerMichael SchinskiTom SchmidtCarl J. SchwendimanCarl SchweserJim ScottJohn W. SettleRichard A. ShickA. M. SibleySandeep SinghSurendra S. SinghviStacy SirmansBarry D. SmithGerald SmolenIra SmolowitzJean SnavelyJoseph V. StanfordJohn A. StockerLester B. StricklerGordon M. StringerElizabeth StrockDonald H. StuhlmanSankar SundarrajanPhilip R. SwensenS. TabriztchiJohn C. TalbottGary TallmanHarry TamuleRichard W. TaylorRolf K. TedefalkRichard TewelesKenneth J. ThygersonRobert D. TollenEmery A. TrahanBarry UzePieter A. VandenbergNikhil P. VaraiyaOscar VarelaMark VaughanKenneth J. VenutoSam VeraldiJames A. VerbruggeRonald P. Volpe
Acknowledgments xli
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John M. Wachowicz Jr.Faye (Hefei) WangWilliam H. Weber IIIHerbert WeinraubJonathan B. WelchGrant J. WellsLarry R. WhitePeter WichertC. Don Wiggins
Howard A. WilliamsRichard E. WilliamsGlenn A. Wilt Jr.Bernard J. WingerTony R. WinglerAlan WolkI. R. WoodsJohn C. WoodsRobert J. Wright
Richard H. YanowSeung J. YoonCharles W. YoungPhilip J. YoungJoe W. ZemanJohn ZietlowJ. Kenton ZumwaltTom Zwirlein
Special thanks go to Alan Wolk of the University of Georgia for accuracy checking the quantitative content in the textbook. We are pleased by and proud of his efforts.
A hearty round of applause also goes to the publishing team assembled by Pearson—including Donna Battista, Kate Fernandes, Meredith Gertz, Melissa Honig, Miguel Leonarte, Kathy Smith, and others who worked on the book—for the inspiration and the perspiration that define teamwork. Also, special thanks to the formidable Pearson sales force in finance, whose ongoing efforts keep the business fun!
Finally, and most important, many thanks to our families for patiently pro-viding support, understanding, and good humor throughout the revision process. To them we will be forever grateful.
Chad J. ZutterPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Scott B. SmartBloomington, Indiana
xlii Acknowledgments
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