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INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE

Testbanks Dec 30, 2025 ★★★★★ (5.0/5)
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Corporate Finance European Edition, 4e Hillier, Ross, Westerfield, Bradford (Solutions Manual Download Link for all Chapters at the end of this file) 1 / 4

CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE

FINANCE

  • Finance relates to the decision-making and strategies of corporations. It is composed of
  • three main elements.

  • The capital budgeting or investment decision.
  • The capital structure or financing decision.
  • Short-term capital management.

Each decision is framed within the general objective of maximizing firm value while ensuring that risk is appropriately managed.

Think a family, with one parent earning the monthly salary and the other looking after the children. Every month, money comes into the house and there will be times when the family needs to spend money on items like furniture. This will usually come from savings. However, sometimes, the family will want to buy a car or a house and will need to take out a loan for the investment. At all times, the family must have enough cash and this applies every single day. This example concerns a family, but if you change the object to a corporation, the same decisions need to be made. When we talk about financial decisions relating to families, this is known as personal finance, whereas when we talk about corporations, we call this corporate finance.

  • The investment decision refers to investments in projects that produce a higher rate of
  • return than the firm’s minimum hurdle rate. The financing decision refers to the optimal mix of debt and equity. Short-term capital management refers to activities related to working capital management that help ensure the liquidity and profitability of a company. The equity decision is explicitly a sub-component of the financing decision.

  • The statement assumes that the market is efficient and markets fully reflect the true
  • value of the firm. In this context, the goal will be the same, but the best course of action toward that goal may be different because of differing social, political, and economic institutions.

  • Financial markets are market places where buyers and sellers trade assets, and they
  • facilitate the raising of capital (e.g. IPOs, SEOs, bond issues), the transfer of risk (e.g.loans), the transfer of liquidity (e.g. the quick sale of assets such as stocks), and international trade (e.g. GDRs). Although in theory, a single global stock exchange would make sense because it brings together all the order flow across the world (which would maximise liquidity), the reality of country and regional politics would make this an impossibility in practice.

  • / 4
  • Securities are issued by organisations requiring external financing in Primary Markets
  • and sold to investors. The main raised in the sale goes directly to the issuing company.When the shareholders or bondholders trade the securities at a later point in time, the transaction is said to take place in the secondary markets. Companies are interested in the secondary markets because the prices that are formed provide insights to management on their performance. If share prices are rising, the management of a firm can be comfortable that market sentiment is positive, whereas if prices are falling, management should be concerned if it is a signal that investors are not happy with the firm’s performance.

  • This is quite a difficult task for students, but it is useful in getting them to read through
  • news stories and to familiarise them with financial websites. The expectations of the instructor should not be too great and the question is very useful for a first lecture in a Corporate Finance class. This answer to this question is very much up to the student.Give them websites that they can visit to collect data including Google, Yahoo! Finance, Reuters, and FT.Com. As an introductory question, it is an excellent way to get students to practically engage with the material and do their own research. You can even get them to prepare a presentation or do the question in groups.

  • Equity = Total Assets – Total Liabilities = €1,403 – €1,253 = €150 million
  • Non-Current Assets = Total Assets – Current Assets = €1,403 - €619 = €784 million Non-Current Liabilities = Total Liabilities – Current Liabilities = €1,253 - €338 = €915 million

  • Step 1: Determine liability/equity ratio: €1,253
  • 8.353

15€0

liability equity ==

Step 2: To find the current weightings of debt and equity in the new funding, you must actually calculate a new ratio, liability/assets. 1,253

0.8931

1,40 € €3 liability Assets ==

Step 3: The debt that is raised is thus €89.31 million and equity is €10.69 million.Step 4: Check the new liability/equity ratio. The new level of liabilities is €1,342.31 million and the new level of equity is €160.69 million. The new ratio is: 1,342.31 8.353 160 €

.69€

liability equity ==

This is the same as the original liability/equity ratio.

9. There are three components to this transaction:

  • Cash outflow of £100 million will appear in cash flow statement. Current assets
  • (cash) will fall by £100 million.

  • We now owe £3.4 billion. Given that it must be paid in 3 months, the amount
  • will show up as an increase in current liabilities of £3.4 billion.

  • Non-current assets will increase by £3.5 billion.
  • / 4
  • The payment of £600,000 in twelve months is less because the cash flow is after the
  • majority of £50,000 monthly payments. Given the principle that £1 today is worth more than £1 next year, eleven payments of £50,000 every month come before the single payment of £600,000, and so the single payment will be worth less than the 12 monthly payments. An example can show the intuition behind this. Assume the monthly interest rate is 1 per cent (it can be anything as long as it is above 0 per cent). The present value

of cash flows is thus:

Annuity PV(CF) One Payment PV(CF)

1 £50,000 £49,504.95

2 £50,000 £49,014.80

3 £50,000 £48,529.51

4 £50,000 £48,049.02

5 £50,000 £47,573.28

6 £50,000 £47,102.26

7 £50,000 £46,635.90

8 £50,000 £46,174.16

9 £50,000 £45,716.99

10 £50,000 £45,264.35

11 £50,000 £44,816.19

12 £50,000 £44,372.46 £600,000 £532,470

PV £562,754 PV £532,470

  • You would choose the less risky project because both have the same expected value. In
  • this case you would choose Project B, because the risk of losing and gaining money is less than in Project A.

  • The Triple Bottom Line is an approach to measure the performance of a company not
  • only in financial terms but also with respect to society and the environment. Companies that follow the triple bottom line find it difficult to accurately measure the monetary value of societal and environmental performance. The financial manager may also be under pressure to prioritise financial performance over societal and/or environmental performance, which undermines the whole concept of the Triple Bottom Line.

  • Although some argue Triple Bottom Line is a waste of managerial time and can detract
  • from a singular focus on financial profitability, others believe Triple Bottom Line can become part of a company’s overall competitive advantage since it can strengthen its relationships with important stakeholders. In addition, if investors value societal and environmental performance, they will bid up the share price of firms that priorities these issues in its business operations.

  • The main reason firms choose different forms of financing relates to their cost. The
  • financial manager should choose the funding flow that is cheapest and less risky. When firms are small, they are not able to list on stock exchanges and therefore they will only

  • / 4

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Added: Dec 30, 2025
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Corporate Finance European Edition, 4e Hillier, Ross, Westerfield, Bradford (Solutions Manual Download Link for all Chapters at the end of this file) CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE FINANCE 1. ...

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