P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 1 International Financial Management P G Apte.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT I AND II
Advertisements

Capital Structure Decisions Chapter 15 and 16
Capital Structure Debt versus Equity. Advantages of Debt Interest is tax deductible (lowers the effective cost of debt) Debt-holders are limited to a.
Lecture 6: Debt Policy Changing a firm’s capital structure should not affect its value to shareholders. This chapter analyzes several possible financing.
Risk Management and the Foreign Currency Hedging Decision Pertemuan 12 Matakuliah: Keuangan Internasional Tahun: 2009.
Session 9 Topics to be covered: –Debt Policy –Capital Structure –Modigliani-Miller Propositions.
Capital Structure Theory Under Three Special Cases
Capital Structure Policy Capital Structure Policy (Ch16)
Capital Structure Decisions: Part I
Chapter Outline The Capital Structure Decision
Financial Leverage and Capital Structure Policy
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Dividends and Dividend Policy Chapter Seventeen.
Dividend Policy 05/30/07 Ch. 21. Dividend Process Declaration Date – Board declares the dividend and it becomes a liability of the firm Ex-dividend Date.
Dividend Policy and Retained Earnings (Chapter 18) Optimal Dividend Policy Conflicting Theories Other Dividend Policy Issues Residual Dividend Theory Stable.
Learning Objectives Describe the trade-off between paying dividends and retaining (reinvesting) firm profits. Does dividend policy affect the company’s.
Dividend policy theories investor preferences Bird in hand
Introduction to Derivatives and Risk Management Corporate Finance Dr. A. DeMaskey.
Interactions of Tax and Nontax Costs n Uncertainty u Symmetric uncertainty u Strategic uncertainty (information asymmetry) F Hidden action (moral hazard)
WHY DO SOME FIRMS SUCCEED? Why do some firms succeed and others fail? Possible explanations include- Luck. How does this help us understand decision-making?
CHAPTER 18 Derivatives and Risk Management
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Cost of Capital Chapter Fourteen.
Business Organization and Financial markets Some basic concepts Financial management: Lecture 2.
Chapter 13.
The Nature of Risk Management Alicia Garcia. What is it? A potential gain or loss that occurs as a result of an exchange rate change. A potential gain.
Basic Tools of Finance Finance is the field that studies how people make decisions regarding the allocation of resources over time and the handling of.
Strategic Financial Decision-Making Framework
Chapter Outline 10.1Tax Benefits Defined 10.2Progressivity in Corporate Income Tax Rates Overview Numerical Example and Additional Insights Progressivity.
Copyright  2006 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Business Finance 9e by Peirson, Brown, Easton, Howard and Pinder Prepared by Dr Buly Cardak 1–1.
The Capital Structure Puzzle: Another Look at the Evidence
Capital Structure.
Capital Structure Decisions
1 CHAPTER 23 Derivatives and Risk Management Risk management and stock value maximization. Derivative securities. Fundamentals of risk management. Using.
Derivatives and Risk Management
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Advanced Project Evaluation
Derivatives and Risk Management Chapter 18  Motives for Risk Management  Derivative Securities  Using Derivatives  Fundamentals of Risk Management.
Capital Structure Decisions: The Basics
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 27 The Basic Tools of Finance.
Derivative securities Fundamentals of risk management Using derivatives to reduce interest rate risk CHAPTER 18 Derivatives and Risk Management.
Financial Leverage and Capital Structure Policy
FINANCIAL LEVERAGE AND CAPITAL STRUCTURE POLICY Chapter 16.
Chapter Outline 9.1Principals of Business Valuation Valuation Formula Components of the Opportunity Cost of Capital Compensation for Risk 9.2Risk Management.
Distribution of Retained Earnings: Dividends
© Prentice Hall, Chapter 15 Dividend Policy Shapiro and Balbirer: Modern Corporate Finance: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Value Creation Graphics.
When is The Financing Decision Irrelevant? MF 807: Corporate Finance Professor Thomas Chemmanur.
© 2004 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited Contemporary Financial Management Chapter 12: Capital Structure Concepts.
1-1 Copyright  2009 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Business Finance 10e by Peirson Slides prepared by Farida Akhtar and Barry Oliver, Australian.
Essentials of Managerial Finance by S. Besley & E. Brigham Slide 1 of 23 Chapter 1 An Overview of Managerial Finance.
McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Leverage and Capital Structure Chapter 13.
1 Chapter 23 Risk Management. 2 Topics in Chapter Risk management and stock value maximization. Fundamentals of risk management.
Nature of Financial Management
Dividends and Dividend Policy. Dividend Definitions (Cash) Net Income Regular Cash Dividend Extra Dividend Special Dividend Asset SalesLiquidating Dividend.
5-1 “Modern” Finance? u “Modern Finance Theory” has many components: u Sharpe’s “Capital Asset Pricing Model” (CAPM) u Modigliani-Miller’s “Dividend Irrelevance.
MODIGLIANI – MILLER THEOREM ANASTASIIA TISETSKA. AGENDA:  MODIGLIANI–MILLER I – LEVERAGE, ARBITRAGE AND FIRM VALUE  MODIGLIANI–MILLER II – LEVERAGE,
Measuring and Increasing Profit. Unit 1 Reminder – What is Profit? Profit is the reward or return for taking risks & making investments.
Ratio Analysis…. Types of ratios…  Performance Ratios: Return on capital employed. (Income Statement and Balance Sheet) Gross profit margin (Income Statement)
CHAPTER 18 Derivatives and Risk Management
Capital Structure Debt versus Equity.
Chapter 16 Learning Objectives
CHAPTER 18 Derivatives and Risk Management
Introduction to Risk Management
CHAPTER 23 Derivatives and Risk Management
CHAPTER 18 Derivatives and Risk Management
The composition of long-term finance used by the firm
The Firm and Its Goals The Firm The Goal of the Firm Do Companies Maximize Profits? Maximizing the Wealth of Stockholders Economic Profits.
Derivatives and Risk Management
Derivatives and Risk Management
Capital Structure Decisions: Part I
Capital Structure Decisions: Modigliani and Miller 1958 JF
Presentation transcript:

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 1 International Financial Management P G Apte

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Objectives of The Firm XIn modern theory of finance the objective of the management of a firm is to maximize the current value of shareholders' wealth. Are we sure that: fCurrent value maximization objective does not ignore the multi-period character of financial (and other) decisions fIt incorporates uncertainty in some way

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Objectives of The Firm (contd.) fThe current value of shareholders' wealth is f S 0 =  D t /(1+k s ) t fS 0 is the current value of the shareholders' wealth, D t is the dividend paid at the end of period t and k s is the rate of discount used by the shareholders Capital gains are taken care of in the above formula

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Objectives of The Firm (contd.) fThe concept of wealth maximization incorporates a multi-period horizon with any combination of dividends and capital gains fEquity shares are risky assets fThe modern theory of finance as represented by the famous Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and the Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) rests on the following three propositions

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Objectives of The Firm (contd.) fInvestors are "risk-averse" fA risky asset has two types of risks associated with it viz. the unsystematic, firm- specific risk and the systematic risk fRisk-averse investors will not worry about firm-specific, unsystematic risks since these risks are diversifiable Hence according to CAPM mitigating unsystematic risk would not add shareholder value.

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization f What should be the attitude of the firm's management regarding firm-specific risks? f Risks arising out of fluctuations in exchange rates, interest rates and commodity prices are pervasive, however they affect different firms in different ways and are therefore firm-specific or idiosyncratic

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) fThe theory underlying the CAPM tells us that hedging such risks is irrelevant i.e. adds no shareholder value fModigliani-Miller analysis of a firm's optimal capital structure offers another argument against hedging fIf capital markets are perfect, individual investors, in particular a firm's shareholders can replicate any financial strategy adopted by the firm

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) fStill another argument against hedging is that with efficient markets it would not matter in the long run whether a firm follows an active hedging policy, a purely passive strategy of hedging all risks at all times or a policy of no hedging at all fAlso, can a firm pass on the risk to someone else without compensating the other party?

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) X If active risk management by a firm adds shareholder value it must be fBecause it alters the firm's cash flows in a way which is beneficial to the shareholders even after meeting the cost of hedging fThe firm can achieve this at a lower cost than what the shareholders would have to incur if they did it on their own

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) YWhy selective or discretionary hedging rather than 100 percent hedging might be an optimal policy under certain conditions f The firm's ability to take advantage of all the available good investment opportunities depends crucially on the availability of internally generated cash fCareful hedging can minimize the probability of the firm finding itself short of internal cash at a time when the environment presents good investment opportunities

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) fThe investment-financing inter-linkage predicts that firms with more growth opportunities are more likely to be hedgers than those with more stable businesses fUnsystematic risks like exchange rate risks, if left unmanaged, increase the probability of the firm getting into financial distress f This can have adverse long term consequences

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) fAdverse reactions by bankers, suppliers, customers etc. can increase costs, and reduce market share fPerception of financial distress may induce key employees to leave fMay induce managers to cut corners, compromise on quality etc. fAll this may threaten long-run survival of the firm

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) f Another argument in favor of hedging has to do with the nature of tax schedules faced by the firm. f Convex tax schedules mean greater tax payment on increase in profits than tax savings on equal reduction in profits f Still another reason might be divisional performance appraisal

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) fAgency-theoretic explanations for hedging focus on the conflict between stockholders and bondholders. Cost of debt can decrease if bondholders perceive prudence on the part of management. fTo undertake hedging themselves, shareholders would need to gather lot of information. This is a costly activity. The firm can do it cheaper.

P.G.Apte INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Risk Management and Wealth Maximization (contd.) fIn the case of a multinational firm whose shareholders are scattered around the world, it is not clear exactly how hedging serves shareholder interests. fDifferent shareholders have different currency habitats. A US multinational protecting its income measured in US dollars may actually hurt its German stockholders