FIN653_Exam 1
what is ebit margin
EBIt /sales
roe and roa come from___ while pm comes from
IS and BS IS
profit margin is
NI/ Sales for every $1 we keep ____
what is operating cash flow
OCF= EBIt+ depreciation-taxes
ROEs fourth form is
PM is broken up into 3 parts ROE= Tax burden * interest burden * EBIT Margin * TAT* EM
what is the quick ratio?
QR = (CA - Inv)/CL 1. St solvency or liquiidty ratio 2. tells us how much in assets we own in terms of cash & accts receivable for every $1 we owe
What we make for SH given what creditors have put up describes what ratio
ROA
Total debt ratio is
TA-TE/TA or TL/TA it tells us how we pay for our assets how company gets moneys to buy assets (capital structure: SH and creditors) lower=better
range in theory for tdr, d to e, and em
TDR: 0 to 1 D to E: 0 to infinity EM: 1 to infinity
what does a TDR of 1 mean?
TDR= TL/TA all financed by creditors and no equity
1st four categories are information from who? the last category is from who?
accounts accountants and finance
which is cheaper debt or equity?
debt is cheaper than equity
any return can be defined as
profit/initial investment
in theory, we can have no itnerest or tax burden above 1 (t or f)
true because that means getting money back
asset management ratios are also known as
"utilization ratios"
The Current Ratio is 200/100 the new current ratio is 150/50 what happens to the ratio?
%change= 200--> 150= -25% = 100-->50 = -50% Overall ratio: -25%/-50%
who is better and why? TAT for each company listed below: A= 10/100 B=20/100 C=30/100 D=40/100
a= .1, B=.2, c=.3, d=.4 D is the most efficient with their assets. For every $1 in assets, they enerate the most ($0..40 in CF)
a tax burden of 0 means
all income goes towards tazes
an interest burden of 0 means
all income is paid to creditors at interest
an asset is
an investment
mgmt uses financial anaylsis to
analyze the company and self reflect
borrowing is encouraged for things that __ in value
appreciate
what is a current asset?
asset that will be converted to cash in less than a year cash (we know we have it) inventory (looking to sell) accounts receivable (know expected pymnt)
we want ___ and _____ to drive numbers and ROE
asset turnover and ebit margin
what is the third category of ratios?
asset utilization/management/turnover/efficiency
the balance sheet is relative to __ while the income statement is relative to ___
assets sales
in finance we are not a fan of ___- and would rather look for ___
averages , trends and relationships
what does a times interest earned ratio of 1 mean?
bad we can barely cover interest expense and have no margin for error shareholders are left unhappy because there is no money for them
why must we be careful with percentage change?
because base amounts must be considered (think Walmart and Winn-Dixie example) whatever number you use first will determine the outcome (we must know exactly what the numbers are saying) can be misleading (stock share example) Percentage change average of 25% when actually you earned $0 dollars. think $50 to $100 then back to $50
why is there no rule of thumb in finance?
because conditions change
why is asset efficiency so important?
because it shows whether a company has enough to cover variable costs
why are we so concerned with EBIt and TAT?
because no secrets to leverage but are secrets to keeping sales high and asset efficiency
why is the em less importnat than ebit margin adn TAT
because there is no secret to leverage
market value versus book value
book value is what you paid minus deprecitation market value is what it is worth if liquidated today
buying a share of stock is an example of
buying cash flows
stockholders equity includes
common stock and prefrrered stock ROE total includes both
when looking at tax burden and interest burden, what are we looking for ?
consistency
creditors want a lower or higher debt to equity ratio?
creditors want a lower debt to equity ratio because they want to know you owe less
debt is cheaper than equity because
debt is paid first so we get a tax break and we pay creditors before sh, less risk=less return
debt vs equity
debt- promises made equity-promises not made liabilities are obligation of the firm that require a payout of cash within a specific period equity is a claim against firms assets and isnt fixed
adding more money into the circulation can
decrease the value of the dollar inflation example: people have more money cause circulation has increased but inflation occurs when too much money is chasing too few goods and prices are driven up
if the debt to equity ratio is 3, this means?
for every $1 we got from shareholders, we have $3 from creditors
the current ratio of .5 tells us that
for every $1 we owe, we will convert $.50 assets into cash .5 is too low because it means we have negative networking capital company has 50 cents in current assets for every 1 in current liabilities
a good lender does what
gives incentive to pay money back
Do we want a high or low TDR and TIER?
high TIER but low TDR
what kind of liquidity ratio do we want?
high but not too hight
how are profitabilitiy ratios determined as good or bad
high is good for EVERYONE
if you are a creditor, do you want a high or low liquidity ratio?
high liquidity ratio (more likely to get paid)
do we want a higher or lower ebit margin
higher= better because means less expenses
Times interest earned ratio tells us
how can we afford it
profitability ratios tells us
how efficiently a company is using its assets and how efficiently it manages its operations
what does the receiveables ratio tell us?
how fast we can sell products sales/acct recievables
Pm is an example of a ratio that tells us what
how much SH get to keep
operation margin is
how much you get to keep before taxes and interest
__- is often the least liquid current asset
inventory
where does the information from category 5 ratios come from>
marketplace and accountants
a measure of profitability is
net income
what is the income statement
tells us how we are doing and what we have spent sales - COGS - Ad Exp - dep'n
describe risk and return using auto insurance?
the higher the risk, the higher the rpemium
what number do we want for inventory turnover ratio
the hight the better because we want to turn and collect on inventory
we determine the price of an asset by looking at
the market
at the end of the day we are concerned with
the market place: public opinion, customers suppliers, investors and employees from the market place
The higher the profit margin,
the more sales i keep
why do we use ratio analysis?
to tell story depending on time and situation
what is the single most important accounting ratio?
ROE how much we are makijng for the group we are workign for
single most important accounting ratio is
ROE (return on equity)
ROE's second form is
ROE= ROA * EM
What financial statements are associated with each financial ratio?
ST (liquidity) and LT (debt) Solvency Ratios - Balance Sheet Asset Efficiency Ratios - Balance Sheet and IS Profitability Ratios - Income Statement
financial ratio categories and where we get the infomration
ST solvency/liquidity- Balance sheet LT solvency/leverage- Balance Sheet Asset Efficiency- Bs + IS Profitability- IS Market Value- Market
why might the TAT be misleading compared to ROA
TAT doesnt pick up expenses so ROA is a more accurate depiction of how much money we are keeping
why would we rather ROA than TAT?
TAT tell us sales over assets and not enough realistic info ROA includes expenses and revenues so more realistic because uses bottom line info
if we have .40 in annual sales and $1 in total assets, what is the total asset turnover and how many years does it take to turn assets completely?
TAT= sales/TA= .4/1 =.4 times 1/.4= 2.5 years to turn assets completely
if the total debt ratio for a comapny is .3, what is the debt to equity and equity multiplier?
TDR = TL/TA = .3/1 A = L + EQ 1 = .3 + EQ EQ = .7 d/e = .3/.7 = .43 EM = Assets/EQ = 1/.7 = 1.43
what is the total debt ratio?
TDR = TL/TA = total assets-total equity/total assets 1. It tells us that for every $1 in assets, how much we owe in liabilities 2. it tells us how the company gets money to buy assets
____ tells us how much and ____ tells us if we can afford it?
TDR tells us how much TIER tells us if we can afford it
What questions do the LT liquidity ratios answer?
TDR, D to E, EM tell us how much debt we have TIER and Cash Coverage tell us if we can afford it
what is the difference between the long term solvency ratios?
TDR, EM, and D to E and LTD (TD without current liab) ratios tell us how much debt we have . ----BS info Times interest earned and Cash coverage tell us if we can afford it ----income sheet info
what does a debt to equity ratio of 1 mean?
TL/TE=1/1 50/50 invested by both sh and creditors for every $1 owed to SH we owe $1 to creditors as well
what ratio is used to easily hide leverage? why?
ex: if TDR=.5 D to E= 1 EM=2 EM stands out the most compared to the others, so use .5 to hide leverage
common size stmnts
express the balance sheet as percentage of assets express the income statement as a percentage of sales
true or false: equity cannot be negative
false: equity can be negative how? retained earnijngs
True or false the higher the tax or interest burden the worse it is
false: higher = better
true or false: stock value is fair
false: not fair, just in equilibrium where supply equals demand
interest is a ___ expense
finance expense
what skills do you need to be a business?
financial statement analysis and spreadhseets
what is the difference between total asset turnover and fixed asset turnover?
fixed asset turnover ignores the least liquid assets (inventory) more realistic/reliable view of asset efficiency
suppose your TDR is .6, what does this mean?
for every $1 in assets, 60 cents came from creditors and 40 cents from shareholders
what does it mean to have a times interest ratio of 1
for every $1 in interest, we have $1 to pay it back. so no margin of error 2 problems: SH are getting no money so unhappy and we are barely paying our interest expense
the current ratio can be read how? use example, comapny current ratio is 2.
for every $1 the company owes, it generates 2 in cash
the industry itself can affect ratios. how?
retail company will have inventory so CR will be much greater than QR service company will not have inventory so CR will be same as QR
____ is use to grow the company internally
retained earnings
how are we able to have negative equity>
retained earnings
ROA is
return on assets What are we making for SH given what creditors and SH have put up high NI/Assets for every $1 in assets we keep ___ in NI
profit margin is also known as
return on sales
how much shareholders get to keep of each asset is measured by
roa = net income over assets= net income/liabilties + Se roa tell use how much the sh make for the money 2 groups put up
how much you make for sh based off what they are putting up
roe
fixed asset turnover ratio is
sales/ FA ignores inventory in which you assume youll make money off of
asset turnover ratio is
sales/total assets for every $1 in assets, we generate ___ in sales "big picture ratio"
explain interest rates
set by marketplace paid to creditors supply of money + demand of money dont have control over*
ROE describes your return to who?
shareholders
net income belongs to
shareholders
what do asset management ratios tell us?
they tell us how efficient a company is with its assets to generate sales
if inventory turnover is 3.2 what does this mean?
this means company sold off or turned over inventory 3.2 times during the years also, 365/3.2= days sales in inventory
if the asset turnover ratio is .64 times, what does this mean?
this means that for $1 in total assets, we generated 64 cents in sales
when analyzing financial statements, it is important to take note of
time and situation makes a difference
a look at a company over time
time series analysis
why do we use financial ratios?
to avoid comparing financial statements of different sizes way of comparing and investigating the relationships between different pieces of financial information
why do we break up ROE
to figure out what is driving the numbers. Interest, operating expenses or taxes
why do companies buy assets?
to generate cash flows, to maximize shareholder wealth
also known as the big picture ratio
total asset turnover
which ratio is easier to hide leverage?
total debt ratio
what is the range of the lt solvency ratios
total debt= 0 to 1 debt to equity= 0 to infinity em= 1 to infinity
what is TTM
trail of twelve months
The higher the better times interest earned ratio...true or false?
true
everyone is happy with a high profitability margin
true
in finance, there are no good versus bad numbers (true or false)
true, they are all relative. if you see a high interest rate, then you're happy with one a little bit lower
one way to standardixe financial statements before analysis is to
use percentages instead of total dollars result: common size statements
money expresses
value
an increasing operating margin indicates
we are making more for shareholders because we are keeping more $ of what we sold
why do we depreciate assets?
we do it over useful life
from a constraint point of view, what do we think about debt?
we dont like debt
what aspects of the firm are we attempting to analyze?
we must know what a good ratio is versus a bad
what is the difference between shareholders and creditors?
we owe money to creditors no matter what because of promises (more risky/constraining because we always owe to them) Shareholders are paid only if we have Net Income to spare (no promises)
if assets =$100 and $10 goes to SH, what does this mean?
we pay back $90 to creditors
an ebit margin of 1 means what
we pay no operating expenses
why are we concerned with inventory turnover?
we want to turn (inventory) and collect ($)
what does the balance sheet tell us?
what assets we own and who puts up the money for the assets
accts look an item and ask financors look at an item and ask
what did we pay for it (cost) how much cf is it generating
finance is an example of ___ analysis
what if
what is equity
what sharehodler's own and what you owe them (no promises) defined as the difference between the assets and liabilities of a firm what stockholders would have remaining after firm discharged its obligations listed in the order would be paid over time
The current ratio is a good explanation of
what we owe relative to what we can convert to cash in a year
what is book value?
what we paid for an item-depreciation
cost benefit analysis?
what you put up for it (money) versus what you receive (degree)
when would we want our liquidity ratio to be higher?
when the economy is struggling because this means we can pay bills and suppliers and get other company's assets
inflation
when too much money is chasing too few goods, so prices go up
Short term solvency or liquidity ratios
1. Current ratio (CR) 2. Quick ratio (QR) 3. Cash ratio (Cash)
suppose a total debt ratio is equal to .3, what does this mean?
.3/1= TL/TA for every $1 in assets, we owe 30 cents to creditors and 70 to sh better than .9
ideally we want our debt equity ratio to be?
1 = ideal capital structure; company financed half and half. if higher, means more constraints because promises to creditors
if current ratio=1, Current liabilities=100 then current asstets equal
100
find the percentage change: yr 1: 2 yr 2: 2.5
2.5-2/2 = /5/2= + 25%
ratio analysis includes how many steps
5 steps
if pm is 3%, what does this mean?
97% of sales go towards expenses
percentage change formula
= (End - Beg)/Beg
suppose TIER for company A=100/10 , B=100/20, C=100/40, and D=100/100
A= 10 B=5 C=2.5 D=1 so we like A because for every $1 in interest expense owed, we have $10 to cover it A will have the easiest time paying creditors back D is bad because they have no margin for error and shareholders are unhappy
inventory turnover ratios is
COGS/ Inventory it tells us how quickly we turn inventory and collect on it asset management/utilization ratio higher/better
how does the current ratio convert to the cash ratio?
CR - Inv = QR = Cash + Rec the current ratio to quick ratio subtract inventory then get rid of everything but cash to get cash ratio
What is the current ratio?
CR = CA/CL 1. short term solvency or liquidity ratio 2. tells us how well we are able to pay back our current liabilities with our current assets. 3. found using info on the balance sheet 4. one of the best known and most often used ratios
What is a good number for CR?
CR should be at least one. If less than one than this means that networking capital is negative. Typically, a current ratio result of 2 to 3 is considered positive. If the ratio result is smaller than 2 to 3, it might be an indication that the organization will have trouble paying obligations in the future. However, a current ratio result that is too high might indicate that an organization is not using assets effectively to grow.
if the current ratio for a company is 1. what happens if you pay off a short term loan of $50?
Current ratio= CA/CL=1= 100/100 minus cash (-50) so new CA= 50 minus liabilities (-50) so new CL= 50 no change in ratio
if the current ratio of a company is 1. What happens if you buy $50 worth of inventory with cash?
Current ratio= CA/CL=1= 100/100 minus cash( -50) plus inventory (+50) no affect on ratio
if the current ratio of a company is 2. What happens if you buy $50 inventory with credit?
Current ratio= CA/CL=2= 200/100 plus inventory (+50) plus liabilities (+50) CR = 250/150 = 1.67
what is the cash coverage ratio
EBIT+ Depreciation/ interest depreciation is a non cash flow expense so this ratio is more realistic on saying how much $ we have to afford debt higher=better
times interest earned ratio is
EBIT/interest tells us how many times our operating income can cover interest expense measures how well a company has its interest obligations covered
what is equity multiplier?
EM = Assets/Equity 1. tells us for every $1 put up by shareholders, how much we have in assets
what is the equity multiplier?
EM= TA/TE for every $1 owed to Shareholders, we have ____ in assets like lower ratio= lower debt= less constraints adn less risk if is 2, means for every $1 from sh we have $2 in assets, so $1 is from creditors
enterprise value fomrula is
EVM= Enterprise Value/ EBITDA EBITDA= ebit + depreciation
we pay creditors from
Int on income statement
if a company's current ratio is 1 and quick ratio is 0 this means...
Inv = 100% of CA (Cash, Rec = 0%) the company can only pay for liabilities if they are able to sell inventory
asset management ratios are
Inventory turnover Receivables turnover Total asset turnovers Days sales in inventory Net Working Capital Turnover Fixed Asset Turnover
what are the two presentations of ROA? explain
ROA= NI + INT / Total Assets (2 groups putting money up) ROA= EBIT- Tax/ Assets (1 group- SH putting money up) EBIT- Tax= NI + INT
return to shareholders is known as
ROE
what is the price earnings ratio?
Price looks at future cash flows earnings looks at past cash flows it tells us what we think about the future relative to the past
waht does ROA describe and how do we know this?
ROA is NI/ Total Assets or NI / L + SE ROA tells us what we make for SH given what SH and creditors put up
ROE's third form is
ROA is broken up into two ROE= PM * TAT * EM
suppose the companies below has the following p/e ratios. what do they tell us? PE ratio A=2 B=10 C=25 D=30 E=245
The market likes E the most but it may not be the best to invest in (overvalued) a high pe for mgmt is great but for investors it may not be worth it
How should we read a current ratio of 1.31?
This means the company owns $1.31 in currents assets for every $1 in current liabilities or the company has current liabilities covered 1.31 times over
what is the times interest earned ratio
Times interest earned ratio= EBIT/Interest how many times over can i cover my interest and pay creditors for every $1 in interest owed, we earned $10 from operations tells us how much money we have to pay interest expense
ultimately, a higher profit margin means
more sales we are actually getting to keep means less expenses
describe the realtionship between the three long term solvency ratios
Total Debt ratio d to e ratio and em are just variations Em: d to e plus 1
what is the TAT?
Total asset turnover ration tells us how efficient we are with our assets. For every $1 in assets, we are generating __ in sales higher=better mgmt consultants use this because we see how well we take care of current customers (think walmart and asset efficiency)
explain the quick version of the ROE breakdown in one sentence:
We break up roe into 2 parts, find the secret and break up ROA, find the secret and break up profit margin
if GM is determined to be driven by a tax refund and leverage, and FDX is determined to be driven by higher EBIT and TaT, who do we like better?
We like FDX better because we want ROE numbers to be driven by TAT and EBIT margin
what is a sensitivity analysis?
What-if analysis statisitics "Is Em driving increase of ROE?"
how do you know if you are looking at a successful current ratio?
a creditor wants a high CR because there's a better chance they will be paid back a manager wants a high but not too high ratio because too high means not being very efficient with assets
why might a high PM be misleading?
a high PM may happen because of low interest rates and low taxes and not neccessarily from what mgmt has done
income statement explains financial information during
a particular time period such as a quarter or a year
what is a treasury security?
a security issued by the federal government
balance sheet is
a snapshot of a point in time
the balance sheet is
a snapshot picture of a point in time (but things can change)
a tax burden of 116.20 signals
a tax refund
if the balance sheet is like a snapshot, the income statement is like
a video recording
suppose price earnings ratio for the companies are found below. what does this tell us? PE ratio A: 10/1 B:10/10 C:10/100 D:10/1000
a=10 b=1 c=.1 d=.01 relative to the past, company a has the brightest future for every $1 earned last year, we expect 10 in future cash flows
long term ratios tell us
ability to meet long term obligations
suppose we have debt to equity Company A: 1 Company B: 3 Company c: 6 what do we like better as a manager? as a consultant?
as a manager we like 1 the most (evenly supported) a consultant might like B because like the use some debt but not too much debt
do we like debt?
as long as we can afford it, yes we like debt but not too much debt. leverage magnifies gains and magnifies losses (make more with more debt, and lose more with more debt)
what is the relationship between the balance sheet and the income statement?
as net income increases, owner's equity increases as net income decreases, owner's equity decreases
walmart's claim to fame
asset efficiency and logistics (very smart when use assets. get things in and get things out)
if the Quick ratio is equal to 1 and the current ratio is equal to 1, you are probably looking at what type of industry?
athletic training or service industry with no inventory (not a retailer)
what ratios are good for measuring good management?
ebit margin (ebit/sales) and tat (sales/assets) operational income and TAT are most importantw
why is the asset turnover ratio high?
because it measures efficiency but doesn't pick up expenses, so ROA is more accurate
why is our ultimate goal to maximize shareholder wealth?
because we believe this is how we will maximize utility and happiness different things make people so we maximize value and let them decide what to do with it
the higher the cash coverage ratio, the ___
better
what happens to firm value as borrowing increases?
borrowing increases so firm value increases
more liquidity is better when
economy is bad so we can purchase other company's assets
4 things we borrow for
education health care business home
can we have negative assets? negative liabilities? negative equity?
can have negative equity
what is cash flow?
cash flow os generated by the firm and paid to creditors and shareholders. it is classified as cash flow from operations, cash flow from changes in fixed assets cash flow from changes in working capital
best measure of liquidity is the
cash ratio
a very short term creditor may be interested in the ___ ratio
cash ratio because it tells me cash/liabilities for every $1 we owe, we know how much we own in assets($)
whats the difference between a stock market and casino
casino has to have winner and loser (wealth transfer) stok market can have all winners and all losers
what are retainined earnings?
come from net income. they are used to grow the company and are left over after we pay dividends (the higher, the better)
net working capital is
current assets-current liabilities when positive this means that the cash that will become available over the next 12 months will be greater than the cash that must be paid out
The _______ measures how many times you can cover your current liabilities.
current ratio
what is the debt to equity ratio?
d/e = TL/TE = total debt/ total equity 1. tells us that for every $1 shareholders have put up, how much we got from creditors 2. 1 = ideal capital structure; company financed half and half.
what is cheaper, debt or equity?
debt is cheaper than equity because BH takes less risk / creditors are paid first - less risky (lower return) and tax breaks (paid before the government) stockholders are last to be paid
creditors are paid an amount generally referred to as
debt service
we is debt cheaper than equity
debt we get a taxx break, less risky, paid first so lower return, government pays part of bill
what drives interest rates
demand for money and supply of money
certain transactions will affect liquidity ratios how?
depending on proportions and percentage change of the ratios
for leverage and liquidity ratios do we want high or low?
depends on who is asking
examples of non cash expenses are
depreciation and amoritization
how do you use sensitivity analysis?
determine if EM is driving the increase of ROE look at year 1 (2003) versus year 2 (2005) take 2005 (EM) plug into 2003 equation of ROE if ROE was driven by EM, the projected/calculated ROE will equal the ROE on the financial statement for 2005
what happens to net income>
dividends: given to shareholders retained earnings: grow the company internally
ebit is
earnings before interest and taxes. also known as operating income
net income is typically expressed how on the income statement?
earnings per share. which is net income/total shares outstanding
how can we hide ratios?
easiest to hide the tdr because it has a smaller range (0-1) so numbers typically look like they fit in (cant lend more than assets)
managers only have influence and control over
ebit (operational income)
the most important part of an income statement is
ebit + dep= EBITDA
do we want a higher or lower TIER ratio
higher=better
LT Solvency Ratios tell us
how much leverage we have? (TDR) and can we afford it? (TIER)
profit margin ratio tells us
how much we generate in net income for every dollar in sales how much are we keeping of sales "return on sales" see income statement for this info want higher
the balance sheet tells us what?
how much we have in assets and who puts up the money for it
how much and can we afford it is explained by
how much--TDR can we afford it --- TIER
ROE is
how profitable we are being for sh given what sh have put up return on equity NI/ equity for every $1 in equity, we keep ___ in NI
Liquidity
how quickly something can be converted to cash with minimal or no loss in value
what do long term leverage ratios tell us?
how we are getting money to buy assets
what is a dividend?
how we pass cash flows to shareholders
CR=1, QR=1, and Cash ratio=1 if given CL= 100 and 0 assets are from inventory and 0 are to receivables this means that
if given CL= 100: 0% of assets are from inventory, 0% are from receivables, 100% of assets from cash
relationship between balance sheet and income statement
if net income is positive, equity increases if net income is negative, equity decreases
how is net working capital and cash flow different?
if you buy inventory with cash--> net working capital DOES NOT change but Cash flows do because they decrease
finance likes to explain the world how?
in percentage change because percentage/average alone can be misleading
when can you fool the market?
in the short run but no the long run
the __ measures performance over a specific period (say a year)
income statement
to determine if a company is profitable, where do we look?
income statement
as retained earnings .and equity increase, we can expect stock prices to
increase
if you can cut expenses, you can
increase EBIT, EBT and Net Income
what do we pay good managers for?
increased profitability from lowered operating expenses controlling ratios: TAT and PM
as the TDR increases, leverage...
increases
what is the problem of borrowing too much?
increases the chance of bankruptcy
asst mangements ratios tell us
intensity and efficiency of assets
an important cash outflow to creditors is
interest expense
if the times earned ratio is 10 this means that
interest is covered 10 times over for ever $1 owed in interest expense, we have $10 to cover it
why do we evaluate financial ratios?
internal use: self reflections and projections external use: trick is to sell and collect
two important current assets used in asset mgmt ratios are
inventory and accounts receivables
what is the law of large #s
more observations you take, the closer you get to the true mean(average)
why is the cash coverage ratio important?
it adds back depreciation (depreciation is a non cash flow expense) because you pay interest on not just ebit but depreciation also
why do we like debt?
it is cheaper than equity someone else's money magnifies gains and losses
is a TDR of 0 good or bad?
it is good. It means that for every $1 we own in assets, $0 came from creditors. so that means we only owe shareholders which we have made no promises too.
what is the problem with Profit margin
it is net income/ sales includes taxes set by government includes interest set by marketplace management has no control over therese
what does it mean to have an equity multiplier of 2?
it tells us that for every $1 we have from shareholders, we have $2 in assets. This means we have $1 from creditors. company is financed 50/50
good versus bad ratio example
its all about relativity and perspective gas prices may be high to those who have seen the low and vice versa
analysts ust use ___ for interpreting for results
judgment look for trends and relationships
why do we like a lower TDR?
less promises=less constraints and less owed to creditors
____is a measure of risk
leverage
example explaining there is no secret to leverage
leverage is clear. more risk = more return gas pedal example. speed=risk and return increased speed, much longer for vehicles to stop, more car deaths
explain how their is no secret to leverage
leverage results are expected more rsk= higher return
there are no secrets to
leverage/borrowing but there are secrets to being profitable higher pm if less expenses relative to sales, there is a secret to less expenses
how does liability constrain a company?
liabiility is something we have to pay back to creditors (we made a promise whether we have the income of not)
name something liquid versus something not very liquid
liquid: cash not liquid: real estate
every company has underlying value called the
liquidation value
the more stock that is in the marketplace for a company, prices do what?
lower prices
what ratios tell us how uch debt adn if we can afford it
lt solvency/leverage ratios
what do we refer to when we genrally speak of the value of an asset or the value of the firm
market value
tobins q=
market value of assets/replacement value of assets
price is the ____ of the firm
market value: price at which willing buyers and sellers would trade the assets
who decides the company's value?
marketplace
what is the price per share of stock
markeys average worth
our ultimate goal is to
maximize shareholder wealth
Our REAL goal is to
maximize utility and happiness
why might consultatnts like a higher debt to equity ratio?
means they have more leverage which could lead to more return
what is the problem with the times interest earned ratio
measure is based on EBIT which is not really a measure of cash available to pay interest
suppose the CR is 15, who is happy?
mgrs arent so happy because means inefficient with cahs, inventory and recievables (assets) but creditors want to see high CR
what is the optimal capital structure?
mix of debt and equity that maximizes firm value
a higher equity multiplier means
more debt and more constraints and higher risk
the higher the profit margin, the
more for sh= dividends or re (cash)
why is it easier to price a new car than a used car?
new cars are more homogenous used cars hace dents and scratches in finance there is no theory so we have to look at trends and relationships
do cash flows appear on an income statement?
no depreciation is a noncash item that is an expense against revenue but does not affect cash flow
some problems with financial statements are
no finance theory finding comparable sized firms one time events seasonal variations
can we have negative assets?
no we cannot cannot have negative liability either CAN have negative equity
does total debt = total liabilities?
no, but we should assume so TD= long term debt TL= long term and short term debt (everything you owe)
do we make a decision off of one observation?
no, one observation (number) doesn't say a whole lot by a few observations (numbers) do
what does a low M to Book ratio indicate?
not using enough money to make a profit (less than 1) someone can come in, buy the assets and liquidate the company
what are current liabilities?
obligations paid within the next year
why do we analyze financial statements>
of interest to shareholders, creditors, and firms own management
what do we have control over as managers?
operating expenses secrets to lowering this
ebit margin is sometimes called the
operating margin
economic profit considers
opportunity cost
highest firm value is
optimal capital structure
short term solvency ratios tell us
our ability to pay bills in short run
problem with ratio analysis
overanalysis because dont know where to start
look at a company compared to its competitors
peer evaluation
choosing a benchmark can be done in two ways
peer evaluation: compeittion comparison. use similiar firm and or industry averages. ratios are analyzed by reference to indsutry standards time series analysis: using histroy to see what trends are developing
how do we calculate percentage change?
percentage change = (end-beg)/beginning (order of numbers makes a difference)
what are two ways to analyze ROE?
percentage change through the years (Remember FD from 03-05 ebit margin increase caused roe increased) sensitivity analysis
what is sensitivity analysis?
plug in different numbers to see the relationship
the relationship between risk and return is
positive
how do we calculate the price of a financial asset:
present value of expected future cash flows
market value is also known as the
price
market value=
price
where does information for the price earnings ratio come from>
price from stocks and shares in the marketplace earnings from accts
what is the price sales ratio?
price per share/sales per share doesnt include expenses used because some companies dont have numbers for past earnijngs
market to book ratio tells us what?
price/bv or market value/book value
how much shareholders get to keep of sales is measured by
profit margin
what ratio tells us the % of sales we get to keep
profit margin if pm is 10%, means 10% of sales we get to keep all else equal, the high pm, roe, and roa wanted because SH and investors are both happy
any return is calculated as
profit/initial investment
best known and most widely used ratios
profitability ratios
For our liquidity ratios, we expect Net income to increase and debt to decrease, but what actually happens?
proportions affect the ratio.**
Business is
qualitative and quantitative
risk management, why?
reduces uncertainty less risk= lower return
what is the difference between shareholders and creditors?
shareholders are potential investors that get money last (net income) - no promises Creditors are those who extend/loan credit to us and receive money first (interest) - promises
also known as money put up also known as money borrowed
shareholders equity liabilities
stocks are riskier. why?
shareholders get paid last
what is the the difference between short term and long term debt?
short term debt means we just dont have the cash flows to line up for the obligation/we haven't paid the bill yet; long term debt means we can't afford it
why do we want to be liquid>
so we can pay bills buy assets at discounts cash does nothing for us (just sits there)
3 reasons we like debt
someones else money cheaper than equity magnifies gains/losses
st versus lt loan existence
st because we dont have the cash flows that line up right now, cash doesnt exist yet, or havent gotten around to pay lt because we dont have the money
how do we determine the price of a financial asset?
stock, bonds, mortgage, savings acct. where we buy cash flows
why are stocks riskier than bonds?
stockholders are last to be paid debt is cheaper than equity because BH take less risk
whats riskier? stock or bonds? why?
stocks are riskier than bonds so Shareholders expect higher return volatility in the market (increased market risk)
returns on average are higher with ___
stocks than treasury and securities (bonds)
one of the largest cash outflows a firm experiences is
taxes
4 reasons we borrow
taxes, home, business, education
what are the books used for?
taxes, ow the business is, to sell the business
the most important item that can be extracted from financial statements is
the actual cash flow of the firm
if the current ratio is 2.2, what does this mean?
the company has an efficient amount of assets in the short run to pay current liabilities without going to outside financing
a current ratio of 20 would mean?
the company is not very efficient with assets
how is the quick ratio similar to the current ratio?
the current ratio becomes the quick ratio when inventory is subtracted so we have a better idea of meeting interest obligations (inventory isn't promised to convert to cash)
earnings are what?
the market tells us about our company
capital structure is defined as
the mix of debt and equity
on a per share basis, what stock is the most value=able?
the one with the highest price
what is price
the present value of expected future cash flows + sell $
enterprise value
the price of the whole company the value of the company (market value) what the company is worth in book value is not the same as the marketplace value
problems with ratios:
there are so many numbers we dont know whwre to start have to know what numbers are actualyl telling us window dressins is used to make financial statement look better there are different accounting methods
what is the finance theory?
there is no fiannce theory
what is the problem with financial statements?
there is no fiannce theory and numbers are always changing
what is the problem with ratios?
there is so much info, we don't know where to start - what are the numbers actually saying?
why do we like someone who has been in business for 20 years?
they have made it through the good and bad years (through high and low interest rates)
is it possible to have more than 100% debt. explain
yes it is assets depreciate faster than you can pay the debt off if net income keeps dropping then equity decreases expenses that cant be paid will be added to liabilities
an interest burden of 1 means
you pay no interest
a tax burden of 1 means
you pay no taxes