Assignment – Principles of Finance
1) Solve these questions in the attachment and make sure that your answer should be in the same word file that I attached.
2) the words between 500 to 700.
3) it should have at least three (3) reference.
The article book is attached

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College of Administrative and Financial Sciences
Assignment 1
Principles of Finance (FIN101)
Deadline for students: (25/02/2022@ 23:59)
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Course Name: Principles of Finance |
Student’s Name: |
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Course Code: FIN101 |
Student’s ID Number: |
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Semester: 2nd |
CRN: 24794 |
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Academic Year: 1443/1444 H, Second Semester |
For Instructor’s Use only
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Instructor’s Name: Bandar Almutairi |
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Students’ Grade: /5 |
Level of Marks: High/Middle/Low |
Instructions – PLEASE READ THEM CAREFULLY
· This assignment is an individual assignment.
· The Assignment must be submitted only in WORD format via the allocated folder.
· Assignments submitted through email will not be accepted.
· Students are advised to make their work clear and well presented. This also includes filling in your information on the cover page.
· Students must mention question numbers clearly in their answers.
· Late submitted assignments will NOT be entertained.
· Avoid plagiarism; the work should be in your own words; copying from students or other resources without proper referencing will result in ZERO marks. No exceptions.
· All answered must be typed using Times New Roman (size 12, double-spaced) font. No pictures containing text will be accepted and will be considered plagiarism).
Submissions without this cover page will NOT be accepted.
Assignment Questions: (Marks: 05)
Q1. XZY has net sales of 5,320,140; net income of 2,145,700; cost of goods sold 1,300,000; and EBIT 2,200,000. Calculate the gross profit and the operating profit margin for the firm. (Show your calculations) (1 Mark)- Ch 4
Q2. Prepare a common sized Balance Sheet for the below Balance sheet? (Show your calculations) (1 Mark)- Ch 4
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Cash |
21,000 |
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Acct/Rec |
52,000 |
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Inventories |
200,500 |
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Current assets |
273,500 |
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Net fixed assets |
132,000 |
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Total assets |
405,500 |
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Accts/Pay |
22,800 |
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Accrued expenses |
21,000 |
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Short-term N/P |
8,700 |
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Current liabilities |
52,500 |
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Long-term debt |
150,000 |
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Total liabilities |
202,500 |
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Owner's equity |
203,000 |
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Total liabilities and owners’ equity |
405,500 |
Q3. ABC company generated total sales of $32,565,420 during fiscal 2021. Depreciation and amortization for the year totaled $1,278,120, and cost of goods sold was $21,400,000. Interest expense for the year was $6,341,250 and selling, general, and administrative expenses totaled $2,556,610 for the year. If the company's tax rate was average 30 percent, what is its net income after taxes? (Show your calculations) (1 Mark)- Ch 3
Q4. BBB company had cash and marketable securities worth $400,134 accounts payables worth $2,490,357, inventory of $1,321,500, accounts receivables of $2,188,128, short-term notes payable worth $120,000, other current liabilities of 200,000, and other current assets of $521,800. What is the company's net working capital? (Show your calculations) (1 Mark)-Ch 3
Q5. In your own words, explain the difference between Brokers and Dealers? (Show your calculations) (1 Mark)-Ch 2
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Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Chapter 1: The Financial Manager and the Firm
Learning Objectives
1. IDENTIFY THE KEY FINANCIAL DECISIONS FACING THE FINANCIAL MANAGER OF ANY BUSINESS FIRM.
2. IDENTIFY THE BASIC FORMS OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES AND THEIR RESPECTIVE STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES.
Learning Objectives
3. DESCRIBE THE TYPICAL ORGANIZATION OF THE FINANCIAL FUNCTION IN A LARGE CORPORATION.
4. EXPLAIN WHY MAXIMIZING THE CURRENT VALUE OF THE FIRM’S STOCK IS THE APPROPRIATE GOAL FOR MANAGEMENT.
5. DISCUSS HOW AGENCY CONFLICTS AFFECT THE GOAL OF MAXIMIZING SHAREHOLDER VALUE.
Learning Objectives
6. EXPLAIN WHY ETHICS IS AN APPROPRIATE TOPIC IN THE STUDY OF CORPORATE FINANCE.
The Role of the Financial Manager
o THREE KEY FINANCIAL DECISIONS
• Capital Budgeting: decide which long-term
assets to acquire
• Financing: decide how to pay for short-term and
long-term assets
• Working Capital: decide how to manage short-
term resources and obligations
The Role of the Financial Manager
o THREE KEY FINANCIAL DECISIONS
• Capital Budgeting
Choose the long-term assets that will yield the greatest net benefits for the firm.
The Role of the Financial Manager
o THREE KEY FINANCIAL DECISIONS
• Financing
Finance assets with the optimal combination of short- term debt, long-term debt, and equity.
The Role of the Financial Manager
o THREE KEY FINANCIAL DECISIONS
• Working Capital Management
Adjust current assets and current liabilities as needed to promote growth in cash flow.
Cash Flows Between the Firm and Its Stakeholders and Owners
How the Financial Manager’s Decisions Affect the Balance Sheet
The Role of the Financial Manager
o THREE KEY FINANCIAL DECISIONS
• Poor decisions about capital budgeting,
financing, or working capital may lead to
bankruptcy or business failure
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o BUSINESS STRUCTURE
• Sole Proprietorship
• Partnership
• Corporation
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP
• Owned by a single person who is financially
responsible for the actions and obligations of
the business
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP
• Advantages
easiest to create
easiest to control
easiest to dissolve
right to all profit
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP
• Disadvantages
owner’s personal assets at risk
owner’s unlimited liability for firm obligations
equity only from owner or business profit
business income taxed as personal income
difficult to transfer ownership
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o PARTNERSHIP
• A business owned by more than one person; one
or more of them financially responsible for the
actions and obligations of the business
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o PARTNERSHIP
• Advantages vs. sole proprietorship
limited protection of owners’ personal assets
owners’ limited liability for firm obligations
more sources of equity
more sources of expertise
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o PARTNERSHIP
• Disadvantages vs. proprietorship
shared control
shared profit
harder to dissolve
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o CORPORATION
• A business owned by more than one person;
none of them financially responsible for the
actions and obligations of the business. The
corporation is responsible for its obligations and
actions.
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o CORPORATION
• Advantages
protects personal assets
no shareholder liability for business
easiest to change ownership
greatest access to sources of funds
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o CORPORATION
• Disadvantages
most difficult and expensive to establish
dilutes individual control over the firm
overall higher taxes on income for shareholders
Basic Forms of Business Organization
o HYBRID FORMS OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATION
• Limited Liability Partnerships (LLPs)
• Limited Liability Companies (LLCs)
• Professional Companies (PCs)
All have the limited liability of a corporation and tax advantage of a partnership.
Organization of the Financial Function
o CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER (CEO)
• Chief manager in the firm
• Ultimate power to make decisions and ultimate
responsibility for decisions
• Reports directly to the board-of-directors who
protect shareholder’s interests
Simplified Corporate Organization Chart
Organization of the Financial Function
o CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER (CFO)
• The V.P. of Finance/CFO is responsible for the
quality of the financial reports received by the
CEO
Organization of the Financial Function
o KEY FINANCIAL REPORTS
• The Treasurer manages and reports on the
collection and disbursement of cash
• The Risk Manager manages and reports on
activities to limit the firm’s risks in financial and
commodity markets
Organization of the Financial Function
o KEY FINANCIAL REPORTS
• The Controller is the firm’s accountant and
prepares its financial reports
• The Internal Auditor controls and reports on
activities to limit the firm’s exposure to internal
threats such as fraud and inefficient use of
resources
Organization of the Financial Function
o EXTERNAL AUDITOR
• Conducts an independent audit of a firm’s
financial activities
• Provides an opinion about whether the financial
reports the firm prepared are reasonably
accurate and conform to generally accepted
accounting principles
The Goal of the Firm
o DO NOT MAXIMIZE MARKET SHARE
• Giving away goods or services for free will
maximize a firm’s market share for a while, but
the firm will not be able to pay its bills and stay
in business
The Goal of the Firm
o DO NOT MAXIMIZE PROFIT
• Accounting profit differs from economic profit
• Profit earned may not equal cash received
Cash not received can’t be used to pay bills
• The strategy ignores the timing of future cash
flows
• The strategy ignores the risks associated with
having to wait for cash flows
The Goal of the Firm
o MAXIMIZE SHAREHOLDERS’ WEALTH!
• Future cash flows are considered
• The timing of future cash flows is considered
• The risks associated with having to wait to for
cash flows are considered
The Goal of the Firm
o MAXIMIZE SHAREHOLDERS’ WEALTH!
• Maximizing the price of a firm’s stock will
maximize the value of a firm and the wealth of
its shareholders (owners)
The Goal of the Firm
o ITS ALL ABOUT CASH FLOW!
• Positive residual cash flow may be paid to firm
owners as dividends or invested in the firm
• The larger the positive residual cash flow, the
greater the value of a firm
• Negative residual cash flow – over the long run –
leads to bankruptcy or closing a business
Agency Conflicts
o AGENCY RELATIONSHIP
• An agency relationship is created when the
owner (a principal) of a business hires an
employee (an agent)
• The owner surrenders some control over the
enterprise and its resources to the employee
• Separating ownership from control creates the
potential for agency conflicts
Agency Conflicts
o AGENCY RELATIONSHIP
• An agency relationship exists between
stockholders (principals) and the firm’s hired
management (agents)
• In large corporations, shared ownership among
many shareholders may result in relatively little
control over management
Agency Conflicts
o OWNERSHIP AND CONTROL
• Shareholders own the corporation, but
managers control the firm’s assets and may use
them for their own benefit
Major Factors Affecting Stock Prices
Agency Conflicts
o AGENCY COSTS
• Arise from (incurring and preventing) conflicts-
of-interests between a firm’s owners and its
managers
• May reduce positive residual cash flow, stock
price, and shareholder wealth
Agency Conflicts
o GIVING AGENTS THE RIGHT INCENTIVE
• Managers tend to focus on wealth maximization
when their compensation depends on stock
price
Agency Conflicts
o GIVING AGENTS THE RIGHT INCENTIVE
• Today, the firm’s stock trades at $0.95 per share.
The CEO has an option to buy 2.5 million
shares from the firm for $1.15 per share at any
time, beginning one year from today. If the
stock price rises to $3.15, the option will be
worth $5 million.
Agency Conflicts
o GIVING AGENTS THE RIGHT INCENTIVE
• Want to keep their jobs
• Oversight by the board of directors
• Oversight by large blockholders
• Potential takeover of the firm
• The legal and regulatory environment.
Agency Conflicts
o SARBANES-OXLEY AND REGULATORY REFORM
• Better corporate governance reduces agency
costs by requiring
more effective monitoring of managers’ activities
programs that promote appropriate behavior by managers
penalties for executives who do not fulfill their fiduciary responsibilities
Corporate Governance Regulations Designed to Reduce Agency Costs
Ethics in Corporate Finance
o WHAT ARE ETHICS?
• Ethics
society’s standards for judging whether an action is right or wrong
• Business Ethics
society’s standards for acceptable behavior applied to business and financial markets
Ethics in Corporate Finance
o EXAMPLES OF ETHICAL CONFLICT IN BUSINESS
• Agency Cost
employee’s unacceptable use of employer’s computer
• Conflict of Interest
mortgage contract which a home-buyer is unlikely to fulfill but earns a mortgage broker more money
• Information Asymmetry
seller knows about prior damage to the vehicle but the potential buyer does not
Ethics in Corporate Finance
o BUSINESS BEHAVIOR
• Regulation and market forces are not enough to
maintain integrity in the marketplace
• Business norms must be based on ethical
beliefs, customs, and practices
Ethics in Corporate Finance
o CONSEQUENCES OF UNETHICAL BEHAVIOR
• Inefficiency in the economy and costs to society
• High legal and social costs
• Problems such as the recent financial crisis in
the U.S.
Ethics in Corporate Finance
o ETHICAL BEHAVIOR
• Sometimes, it is difficult to judge whether
behavior is ethical or not
Was the manager too careful?
Did the manager take too much risk?
Was it an honest mistake?
Was it against policy, but well-intentioned?
A Framework for the Analysis of Ethical Conflicts
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Chapter 2: The Financial System and the Level of Interest Rates
Learning Objectives
1. DESCRIBE THE ROLE OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM IN THE ECONOMY AND THE TWO BASIC WAYS IN WHICH MONEY FLOWS THROUGH THE SYSTEM.
2. DISCUSS DIRECT FINANCING AND THE IMPORTANT ROLE THAT INVESTMENT BANKS PLAY IN THIS PROCESS.
Learning Objectives
3. DESCRIBE THE PRIMARY, SECONDARY, AND MONEY MARKETS, EXPLAINING THE SPECIAL IMPORTANCE OF SECONDARY AND MONEY MARKETS TO BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS.
4. EXPLAIN WHAT AN EFFICIENT MARKET IS AND WHY MARKET EFFICIENCY IS IMPORTANT TO FINANCIAL MANAGERS.
Learning Objectives
5. EXPLAIN HOW FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS SERVE THE NEEDS OF CONSUMERS, SMALL BUSINESSES, AND CORPORATIONS.
6. COMPUTE THE NOMINAL AND THE REAL RATES OF INTEREST, DIFFERENTIATING BETWEEN THEM.
The Financial System
o FINANCIAL MARKETS AND INSTITUTIONS
• Financial markets include markets for trading
financial assets such as stocks and bonds
• Financial institutions include banks, credit
unions, insurance companies, and finance
companies
The Financial System
o THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM AT WORK
• The financial system is competitive
• Money is borrowed in small amounts and
loaned in large amounts
• The system directs money to the best
investment opportunities in the economy
• Lenders earn profit from the spread between
lending and borrowing rates
The Financial System
o MOVE FUNDS FROM LENDER TO BORROWER
• The primary function of a financial system is to
efficiently transfer funds from lender-savers to
borrower-spenders
• Basic mechanisms by which funds are
transferred in the financial system
Direct Financing
Indirect Financing
The Flow of Funds Through the Financial System
Direct Financing
o DIRECT TRANSFER OF FUNDS
• lender-saver contracts with a borrower-spender
• minimum transaction $1 million
• investment banks and money center banks help
with origination, underwriting and distribution
of new debt and equity
Direct Financing
o DIRECT TRANSFER OF FUNDS
• Underwriting is a service to assist firms in
selling their debt or equity securities in a direct
financing market
Types of Financial Markets
o WHOLESALE AND RETAIL MARKETS
• Primary Market
wholesale market where firms’ new securities are issued and sold for the first time
• Secondary Market
retail market where previously issued securities are resold (traded)
Types of Financial Markets
o MARKETABILITY AND LIQUIDITY
• Marketability
ease with which a seller or buyer for an asset can be found
• Liquidity
ease with which an asset can be converted into cash without loss of value
Types of Financial Markets
o MARKETABILITY AND LIQUIDITY
• Financial markets increase marketability and
liquidity of securities
• Financial markets lower the costs of making
transactions and make participants more willing
and able to pay higher prices
Types of Financial Markets
o BROKERS AND DEALERS
• A broker brings a seller and a buyer together but
does not buy or sell in the transaction
broker does not take on risk
• A dealer participates in trades as a buyer or
seller using her own inventory of securities
dealer takes on risk
Types of Financial Markets
o EXCHANGES & OVER-THE-COUNTER MARKETS
• Exchange
location where sellers and buyers meet to conduct transactions – New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
– Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)
Types of Financial Markets
o EXCHANGES & OVER-THE-COUNTER MARKETS
• Over-the-Counter Market
dealers conduct transactions over the phone or via computer. – National Association of Securities Dealers Automated
Quotations (NASDAQ)
Types of Financial Markets
o MONEY AND CAPITAL MARKETS
• Money Market
market for low-risk securities with maturities of less than one year. – Treasury Bills (T-bills)
– Commercial Paper
Types of Financial Markets
o MONEY AND CAPITAL MARKETS
• Capital Market
market for securities with maturities longer than one year – bonds
– common stock
Selected Money Market and Capital Market Instruments June 2010
Market Efficiency
o EFFICIENT MARKET
• Current prices of securities incorporate the
knowledge and expectations of all participants
• Security prices are correct: securities are not
over-valued or under-valued.
• Participants are confident they pay or receive
the intrinsic (fair) value of a security
Market Efficiency
o MARKET EFFICIENCY
• Operational Efficiency
extent to which transaction costs are minimized
• Informational Efficiency
extent to which security prices reflect all relevant information
Market Efficiency
o EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS
• A theory about how efficiently the stock market
processes and incorporates information
available from
private sources of information
public sources of information
historical stock prices
Market Efficiency
o EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS
• Strong-Form Efficiency
Security prices always reflect all information, from every source. Even inside, or confidential information, is reflected.
Market Efficiency
o EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS
• Semistrong-Form Efficiency
Security prices always reflect all public information. Inside, or confidential information, is not reflected.
Market Efficiency
o EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS
• Weak-Form Efficiency
Security prices always reflect the information in past prices. No other information is reflected.
Market Efficiency
o EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS
• Public markets, such as the NYSE are more
efficient than private markets due to the
information provided by a large number of
participants and effective regulation
Financial Institutions and Indirect Financing
o INDIRECT FINANCING
• An institution is both a borrower and lender
borrows money from a saver
lends money to a borrower
must repay funds to the saver – whether or not it is repaid by the borrower – Examples: banks & insurance companies
Financial Institutions and Indirect Financing
o FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
• Provide lending and borrowing opportunities at
the retail level for small customers and
wholesale level for large customers
• Efficiently collect funds in small amounts and
lend them in larger amounts
• Tailor loan amounts and contract terms to fit the
needs of consumers, corporations, and small
businesses
Cash Flows Between the Firm and the Financial System
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o INTEREST RATE
• The fee for borrowing money expressed as a
percentage of a loan
real rate of interest – interest rate that would exist in the absence of inflation
(deflation)
nominal ate of interest – interest rate adjusted for inflation (deflation)
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o REAL RATE OF INTEREST
• Determinants of the real rate of interest
expected return on productive assets
time preference for consumption
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o EQUILIBRIUM RATE OF INTEREST
• Is a function of supply and demand
savers supply more funds at higher rates
spenders borrow (demand) less at higher rates
• Is the interest rate at which the quantity of
funds supplied equals the quantity of funds
demanded
The Determinants of the Equilibrium Rate of Interest
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o INFLATION AND LOAN CONTRACTS
• Lenders want the interest rates in loan contracts
to include compensation for the inflation
predicted to occur over the life of the contract
• Compensation for expected inflation adjusts
loan rates to offset the higher prices for goods
and services expected to exist when a loan is
repaid and a lender spends the money
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o FISHER EQUATION & NOMINAL INTEREST RATE
• The Fisher Equation
o
Where:
i = nominal interest rate
r = real rate of interest
∆Pe = expected annualized price-level change
r∆Pe = adjustment for expected price-level
change
)1.2( ee
PrPri
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o FISHER EQUATION & NOMINAL INTEREST RATE
• Simplified Fisher Equation
)2.2( e
Pri
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o FISHER EQUATION EXAMPLE
14.40% or 0.1440
0.10) x (0.04 0.10 0.04
Pr P r i
? i0.10 P0.04 r
ee
e
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o SIMPLIFIED FISHER EQUATION EXAMPLE
14% or 0.14
0.10 0.04
Pe r i
? i0.10 Pe0.04 r
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o REAL RATE OF INTEREST EXAMPLE
r 0.04
r 0.10 – 0.14
0.10 r 0.14
P r i
? r0.10 P0.14 i
e
e
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o CYCLICAL & LONG-TERM INTEREST RATES
• Interest rates tend to rise and fall with changes
in the rate of inflation
• Rates tend to rise when the growth rate of the
economy increases and tend to fall when the
growth rate of the economy slows
The Determinants of Interest Rate Levels
o INTEREST RATE, BUSINESS CYCLE & INFLATION
• Interest rates tend to follow the business cycle
• Interest rates tend to increase during an
economic expansion
• Interest rates tend to decrease during an
economic contraction
Relation Between Annual Inflation Rate and Long-Term Interest Rate
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Chapter 3: Financial Statements, Cash Flows, and Taxes
Learning Objectives
1. DISCUSS GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (GAAP) AND THEIR IMPORTANCE TO THE ECONOMY.
2. EXPLAIN THE BALANCE SHEET IDENTITY AND WHY A BALANCE SHEET MUST BALANCE.
3. DESCRIBE HOW MARKET-VALUE BALANCE SHEETS DIFFER FROM BOOK-VALUE BALANCE SHEETS.
Learning Objectives
4. IDENTIFY THE BASIC EQUATION FOR THE INCOME STATEMENT AND THE INFORMATION IT PROVIDES.
5. UNDERSTAND THE CALCULATION OF CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING, INVESTING, AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES REQUIRED IN THE STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS.
6. EXPLAIN HOW THE FOUR MAJOR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS DISCUSSED IN THIS CHAPTER ARE RELATED.
Learning Objectives
7. IDENTIFY THE CASH FLOW TO A FIRM’S INVESTORS USING ITS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.
8. DISCUSS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN AVERAGE AND MARGINAL TAX RATES.
Financial Statements
o PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
• Provide stakeholders a foundation for evaluating
the financial health of a firm
creditors
employees
management
stockholders
Financial Statements
o PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
• Provide stakeholders a foundation for evaluating
the financial health of a firm.
customers
general Public
regulators
suppliers
Financial Statements
o PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
• Evaluate a firm’s internal environment
efficiency
effectiveness
risk level
Financial Statements
o PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
• Evaluate a firm’s interaction with the external
environment
corporate citizenship
social responsibility
assessment of the external environment
response to the external environment
Financial Statements
o PURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
• Provide information about the performance of
the firm
stakeholders want to compare actual vs. potential performance
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o GAAP
• Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(GAAP)
accounting rules and standards that public companies must adhere to when they prepare financial statements and reports
established by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and authorized by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o INTERNATIONAL GAAP
• Uniform accounting rules and procedures
promoted by the International Accounting
Standards Board
• Firms in the European Union are moving
toward a “European GAAP”
• Economic and political pressure is building in
the United States and Europe to develop a
unified accounting system
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o GAAP
• Guidelines, not rules
Firms have discretion about how their financial information is presented.
No two firms are required to have identical statements.
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o GAAP
• Guidelines, not rules.
Alternative terms on financial statements – balance sheet, statement of financial condition
– income statement, statement of operations, profit and loss statement
– cost-of-goods-sold, cost-of -sales, cost-of-revenue, cost-of- services-sold
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o FIVE IMPORTANT ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
1. Assumption of Arm’s Length Transaction
Parties involved in an economic transaction arrive at a decision independently and rationally.
2. Cost Principle
Asset values are recorded at the cost for which they were acquired.
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o FIVE IMPORTANT ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
3. Realization Principle
Revenue is recognized when a transaction is completed, although cash may be received earlier or later.
4. Matching Principle
Revenue is matched with the expense incurred to generate it.
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o FIVE IMPORTANT ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
5. Going Concern Assumption
Assume a company will continue to operate for the predictable future.
Financial Statements and Accounting Principles
o ANNUAL REPORT
• Summarizes the overall performance of a firm
for the most recent fiscal year
• Information
the company, its products, its activities, and its future
summary of financial performance for the most recent year
audited financial statements, five-year summary of financial data
The Balance Sheet
o FIRM ASSETS & FUNDING AT A POINT IN TIME
• Left side of a balance shows assets a firm owns
and uses to generate revenue
• Right side of the balance sheet shows sources
of the funds used to acquire assets
)1.3(' EquityrsStockholdeTotalsLiabilitieTotal
AssetsTotal
Diaz Manufacturing Balance Sheets as of December 31
The Balance Sheet
o ITEM ORDER
• Assets listed in order of liquidity
• Liabilities listed in order in which they are due
to be paid
• Stockholders’ equity listed last
Common stockholders are entitled to assets remaining after all other providers of funds are paid.
The Balance Sheet
o CURRENT ASSETS
• Assets likely to be converted to cash within a
year (or one operating cycle)
marketable securities
accounts receivable
inventory
The Balance Sheet
o CURRENT LIABILITIES
• Liabilities scheduled to be paid within a year (or
one operating cycle)
accounts payable
accrued wages
debt with less than a year’s maturity
taxes
The Balance Sheet
o NET WORKING CAPITAL
(3.2)sLiabilitie Current Total –
AssetsCurrent Total Capital WorkingNet
The Balance Sheet
o NET WORKING CAPITAL EXAMPLE
• Diaz Manufacturing
Total current assets = $1,039.8 million
Total current liabilities = $377.8 million
Net working capital = Total current assets – Total current liabilities
= $1,039.8 million – $377.8 million
= $662.0 million
The Balance Sheet
o INVENTORY ACCOUNTING
• Inventory (least liquid current asset) reported
using one of two methods
FIFO (first-in-first-out) assumes merchandise is sold in the order it was acquired by a firm.
LIFO (last-in-first-out) assumes merchandise is sold in the reverse of the order it was acquired by a firm.
The Balance Sheet
o INVENTORY ACCOUNTING
• When the cost of inventory is increasing
FIFO reporting says a firm sold the less expensive inventory and leads to – higher balance in inventory
– lower cost-of-goods-sold
– higher taxable income
– higher income taxes
– higher net income
The Balance Sheet
o INVENTORY ACCOUNTING
• When the cost of inventory is increasing
LIFO reporting says a firm sold the more expensive inventory and leads to – lower balance in inventory
– higher cost-of-goods-sold
– lower taxable income
– lower income taxes
– lower net income
The Balance Sheet
o INVENTORY ACCOUNTING
• When the cost of inventory is decreasing
FIFO reporting says a firm sold the more expensive inventory and leads to – lower balance in inventory
– higher cost-of-goods-sold
– lower taxable income
– lower income taxes
– lower net income
The Balance Sheet
o INVENTORY ACCOUNTING
• When the cost of inventory is decreasing
LIFO reporting says a firm sold the less expensive inventory and leads to – higher balance in inventory
– lower cost-of-goods-sold
– higher taxable income
– higher income taxes
– higher net income
The Balance Sheet
o INVENTORY ACCOUNTING
• Firms may switch from one inventory
accounting method to the other under
extraordinary circumstances but not frequently
The Balance Sheet
o LONG-TERM ASSETS
• Real Assets
land
buildings
equipment
• Intangible Assets
goodwill
patents
copyrights
The Balance Sheet
o LONG-TERM ASSETS
• Real assets decline with use and are depreciated
Depreciation expense reduces taxable income and income taxes.
Assets are depreciated using either the straight line or accelerated depreciation method.
• Intangible assets lose value over time and are
amortized (equivalent to depreciated)
The Balance Sheet
o LONG-TERM LIABILITIES
• Long-term debt
bank loans
mortgages
bonds with a maturity longer than one year
The Balance Sheet
o EQUITY
• Common Stock
ownership with control in a firm
• Preferred Stock
ownership without control in a firm
features make it an equity security that resembles debt
The Balance Sheet
o OTHER BALANCE SHEET ACCOUNTS
• Retained earnings
Profit kept and used to acquire assets.
• Treasury stock
Shares of its own stock a firm holds rather than sell them to the public.
Market Value vs. Book Value
o RECORDING ASSET VALUE
• Assets are traditionally reported at historical
cost on a balance sheet
• Balance sheet amount does not reflect current
market value – only the acquisition cost
Market Value vs. Book Value
o ASSET VALUATION
• Better information is provided to management
and investors by marking-to-market —
reporting balance sheet items at current market
values
difficult to determine market values of assets
• The difference between the market values of
assets and liabilities is a realistic estimate of the
market value of shareholders’ equity
The Income Statement
o INCOME STATEMENT: OVERVIEW
• Measures the profitability of a firm for a
reporting period
• Revenue is income from selling products and
services – for cash or credit
• Expenses include costs of providing products
and services, and asset utilization (depreciation
and amortization)
(3.3) Expenses – Revenues income Net
Diaz Manufacturing Income Statements
The Income Statement
o NET INCOME EXAMPLE
• Diaz Manufacturing
Revenues = $1,563.7 million
Expenses = $1,445.2 million
Net Income = Revenues – Expenses
= $1,563.7 million – $1,445.2 million
= $ 118.5 million
The Income Statement
o DEPRECIATION
• The cost of a physical asset, such as plant or
machinery, is written off over its lifetime. This
is called depreciation, a non-cash expense
• Firms use one of these depreciation methods
straight-line depreciation
accelerated depreciation – Firms may choose to use one for internal purposes and
another for tax purposes or for statements released to the public.
The Income Statement
o AMORTIZATION
• Amortization expense is related to using
intangible assets
goodwill
patents
licenses – Like depreciation, it is a non-cash expense.
The Income Statement
o EXTRAORDINARY ITEM
• Income or expense associated with events that
are infrequent and abnormal
separated from the results of ordinary income
shown separately on the income statement
The Income Statement
o EBITDA AND EBIT
• Earnings-before-interest-taxes-depreciation-
and-amortization (EBITDA)
income from selling goods and services minus the cost of providing them
• Earnings-before-interest-and-taxes (EBIT)
EBITDA minus depreciation and amortization
The Income Statement
o EBT AND NI
• Earnings-before-taxes (EBT)
EBIT minus interest expense
taxable income
• Net income (NI)
EBT minus taxes
Statement of Retained Earnings
o RETAINED EARNINGS
• Shows cumulative effect of adjustments to
shareholders’ equity resulting from profit,
losses, and paying dividends
• Shows changes in the account for a period
based on profit, loss, or dividend paid
Diaz Manufacturing Statement of Retained Earnings
Cash Flows
o NET CASH FLOWS VERSUS NET INCOME
• Accountants focus on net income and
shareholders focus on net cash flows. These are
not the same because of delays in inflows and
outflows, and non-cash revenues and expenses
Cash Flows
o CASH FLOWS TO INVESTORS
• Cash flows available to investors from operating
activities (CFOA)
(3.4) expenses Noncash
TaxesCurrent – EBIT CFOA
Cash Flows
o CFOA EXAMPLE
• Diaz Manufacturing
EBIT = $168.4 million
Current Taxes = $44.3 million
Non-cash expenses = $83.1 million
million $207.2
$83.1m $44.3m – $168.4m
Expenses Cash-Non Taxes Current – EBIT CFOA
Cash Flows
o CASH FLOWS TO WORKING CAPITAL
• To compute the net cash flows into or out of
working capital
(3.5) NWC- NWC CFNWC
Period PreviousPeriod Current
Cash Flows
o CFNWC EXAMPLE
• Diaz Manufacturing
NWC 2011 = $662.0 million
NWC 2010 = $342.0 million
million $320.0
$342.0 – $662.0m
NWC – NWC CFNWC 201020112011
Cash Flows
o STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
• Summarizes cash outflows and cash inflows
during a period
• Cash flows result from operating activities,
investing activities, and financing activities
• Net cash flows equals cash inflows minus cash
outflows
Diaz Manufacturing Statement of Cash Flows
Cash Flows
o STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ORGANIZATION
• Operating Activities
cash inflows – sell goods and services
cash outflows – raw materials
– inventory
– salaries and wages
– utilities
– rent
Cash Flows
o STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ORGANIZATION
• Investing Activities
cash outflows and inflows due to – buying and selling long-term assets such as plant and
equipment
– buying and selling bonds and stocks issued by other firms
Cash Flows
o STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ORGANIZATION
• Financing Activities
cash inflow – issue debt
– issue equity
– borrow money
cash outflow – pay interest or dividends
– repay loan principal
– purchase treasury stock
Interrelations Among the Financial Statements
Federal Income Tax
o CORPORATE INCOME TAX
• U.S. has a progressive tax with rates ranging
from 15 percent to 39 percent
higher taxable income = higher the tax liability
Corporate Tax Rates for 2010
Federal Income Tax
o AVERAGE VERSUS MARGINAL TAX RATE
• Average tax rate
total taxes paid divided by taxable income for the period
• Marginal tax rate
rate paid on the last dollar earned or the next dollar that will be earned
Federal Income Tax
o DIVIDENDS AND INTEREST ARE NOT EQUAL
• U.S. tax code
allows interest payments on debt to reduce firms’ taxable income
does not allow dividend payments to equity to reduce firms’ taxable income – debt financing has a lower cost relative to equity financing
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Chapter 4: Analyzing Financial Statements
Learning Objectives
1. EXPLAIN THE THREE PERSPECTIVES FROM WHICH FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CAN BE VIEWED.
2. DESCRIBE COMMON-SIZE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, EXPLAIN WHY THEY ARE USED, AND BE ABLE TO PREPARE AND USE THEM TO ANALYZE THE HISTORICAL PERFORMANCE OF A FIRM.
Learning Objectives
3. DISCUSS HOW FINANCIAL RATIOS FACILITATE FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, AND BE ABLE TO COMPUTE AND USE THEM TO ANALYZE A FIRM’S PERFORMANCE.
4. DESCRIBE THE DUPONT SYSTEM OF ANALYSIS AND BE ABLE TO USE IT TO EVALUATE A FIRM’S PERFORMANCE AND IDENTIFY CORRECTIVE ACTIONS THAT MAY BE NECESSARY.
Learning Objectives
5. EXPLAIN WHAT BENCHMARKS ARE, DESCRIBE HOW THEY ARE PREPARED, AND DISCUSS WHY THEY ARE IMPORTANT IN FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS.
6. IDENTIFY THE MAJOR LIMITATIONS IN USING FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS.
Background for Financial Statement Analysis
o PERSPECTIVES FOR ANALYSIS
• Stockholder
• Manager
• Creditor
Background for Financial Statement Analysis
o STOCKHOLDER’S PERSPECTIVE
• Focus on
net cash flows
risk
rate of return
market value of firm’s stock
Background for Financial Statement Analysis
o MANAGER’S PERSPECTIVE
• Focus on
rate of return
efficient use of assets
controlling costs
increasing net cash flows
increasing market value of firm’s stock
job security
Background for Financial Statement Analysis
o CREDITOR’S PERSPECTIVE
• Focus on
predictability of revenues and expenses
ability to meet short-term obligations
ability to make loan payments as scheduled
no unanticipated change in risk
Common-Size Financial Statements
o COMMON-SIZE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
• Show the dollar amount of each item as a
percentage of a reference value
Common-size balance sheet may use total assets as the reference value; each item is expressed as a percentage of total assets.
Common-size income statement may use net sales as the reference value; each item is expressed as a percentage of net sales.
.
Common-Size Financial Statements
o COMMON-SIZE BALANCE SHEET
• Standardizes the amount in a balance sheet
account by converting the dollar value of each
item to its percentage of total assets
Dollar values on a regular balance sheet provide information on the number of dollars associated with a balance sheet account.
Percentage values on a common-size balance sheet provide information on the relative size or importance of the dollars associated with a balance sheet account.
Exhibit 4.1: Common-Size Balance Sheets for Diaz Manufacturing
Exhibit 4.2: Common-Size Income Statements for Diaz Manufacturing
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o RATIOS IN FINANCIAL ANALYSIS.
• Ratios establish a common reference point
across firms – even though the numerical value
of the reference point will differ from firm-to-
firm
Ratios make it easier to compare the performance of large firms to that of small firms.
Ratios make it easier to compare the current and historical performance of a single firm as the firm changes over time.
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o RATIOS USED VARY ACROSS FIRMS
• occupancy ratios (hotel)
• sales-per-square foot (retailing)
• loans-to-assets (banking)
• medical cost ratio (health insurance)
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o RATIO VALUES VARY WITHIN AN INDUSTRY
• 2010 Gross Margin
Big Lots Target Walmart
40.6% 30.5% 24.9%
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o CATEGORIES OF COMMON FINANCIAL RATIOS
• Liquidity ratios
• Efficiency ratios
• Leverage ratios
• Profitability ratios
• Market Value ratios
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o LIQUIDITY RATIOS
• Indicate a firm’s ability to pay short-term
obligations with short-term assets without
endangering the firm. In general, higher ratios
are a favorable indicator.
(4.2) liabilites Current
Inventory – assets Current Ratio Quick
(4.1) liabilites Current
assets Current Ratio Current
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o EFFICIENCY RATIOS
• Indicate a firm’s ability to use assets to produce
sales. These are also called turnover ratios. In
general, higher numbers are a favorable
indicator.
(4.7) AssetsTotal
Sales Net Turnover AssetTotal
(4.3) Inventory
Sold Goods of Cost TurnoverInventory
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o EFFICIENCY RATIOS
• For the efficiency ratio below, a lower number is
generally a positive signal
(4.4)
TurnoverInventory
Days 365 Inventory in Sales Days
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o LEVERAGE (DEBT) RATIOS
• Indicate whether a firm is using the appropriate
amount of debt financing. In general, higher
ratios indicate greater potential return and
greater bankruptcy risk.
(4.10) Equity Total
Debt Total Equity-to-Debt
(4.9) AssetsTotal
Debt Total Ratio Debt Total
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o LEVERAGE (DEBT) RATIOS
• For the ratio below, a higher number generally
indicates less bankruptcy risk and (possibly)
lower potential return
(4.12) Expense Interest
Taxes & Interest Before Earnings
Earned Interest Times
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o PROFITABILITY RATIOS
• Indicate whether a firm is generating adequate
profit from its assets. In general, higher ratios
indicate better performance.
(4.19) Equity Total
Income Net Equity on Return
(4.18) AssetsTotal
Income Net Assetson Return
(4.16) Sales Net
Income Net Margin Profit Net
Financial Ratios and Firm Performance
o MARKET VALUE RATIOS
• Indicate how the market is valuing the firm’s
equity. Higher ratios indicate greater
shareholder wealth.
(4.22) Share PerEquity of ValueBook
Share Per Price Book-to-Market
(4.21) Share Per Earnings
Share Per Price Ratio Earnings-Price
Exhibit 4.3: Ratios for Time-Trend Analysis for Diaz Manufacturing
The DuPont System
o THE DUPONT SYSTEM
• Diagnostic tool for evaluating a firm’s financial
health
• Uses related ratios that link the balance sheet
and income statement
• Based on two equations that connect a firm’s
ROA and ROE
• Used by management and shareholders to
understand factors that drive ROE
The DuPont System
o THE DUPONT EQUATION
• In ratio form (Equation 4.26)
• Shows that return-on-equity is driven by
profitability, operating efficiency, and amount of
leverage (debt)
Equity Total
AssetsTotal
AssetsTotal
Sales Net
Sales Net
Income Net ROE
Exhibit 4.4: Two Basic Strategies to Earn a Higher ROA
Exhibit 4.5: Relations in the DuPont System of Analysis
Selecting a Benchmark
o BENCHMARK RELEVANCE
• A ratio or ratio analysis is relevant only when
compared to an appropriate benchmark
Trend Analysis – comparison to the firm’s historical performance
Peer Group Analysis – comparison to a select group of firms in the same industry
Industry Analysis – comparison to the aggregate of firms in the same industry
Selecting a Benchmark
o BENCHMARK RELEVANCE
• A ratio or a ratio analysis is relevant only when
compared to the appropriate benchmark(s).
Benchmarks may be used in combination.
Level and trend should be considered when evaluating a firm’s performance and its future.
Exhibit 4.6: Peer Group Ratios for Diaz Manufacturing
Exhibit 4.7: Peer Group Analysis for Diaz Manufacturing
Limitations of Financial Statement Analysis
o FINANCIAL STATEMENT ANALYSIS
• Weaknesses
not an exact science
relies on accounting data and historical costs
few guidelines or principles for determining whether a ratio is “high” or “low”, or is a reason for confidence or for concern
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Chapter 5: The Time Value of Money
Learning Objectives
1. EXPLAIN WHAT THE TIME VALUE OF MONEY IS AND WHY IT IS SO IMPORTANT IN THE FIELD OF FINANCE.
2. EXPLAIN THE CONCEPT OF FUTURE VALUE, INCLUDING THE MEANING OF THE TERMS PRINCIPAL, SIMPLE INTEREST AND COMPOUND INTEREST, AND USE THE FUTURE VALUE FORMULA TO MAKE BUSINESS DECISIONS.
Learning Objectives
3. EXPLAIN THE CONCEPT OF PRESENT VALUE, HOW IT RELATES TO FUTURE VALUE, AND USE THE PRESENT VALUE FORMULA TO MAKE BUSINESS DECISIONS.
4. DISCUSS WHY THE CONCEPT OF COMPOUNDING IS NOT RESTRICTED TO MONEY, AND USE THE FUTURE VALUE FORMULA TO CALCULATE GROWTH RATES.
The Time Value of Money
o EXCHANGING CONSUMPTION OPPORTUNITIES
• How does a manager determine the value of a
future cash-flow, whether the cash-flow is a
payment to be made or income to be received?
• How much is a series of future cash-flows
worth today?
• The price/value today of cash-flows that occur
in the future is determined by the time-value-of-
money (TVM).
The Time Value of Money
o CONSUME TODAY OR TOMORROW?
• TVM is based on the belief that people prefer to
consume goods today rather than wait to
consume the same goods tomorrow
An apple we can have today is more valuable to us than an apple we can have in one year.
Money has a time value because buying an apple today is more important than buying an apple in one year.
The Time Value of Money
o CONSUME TODAY OR TOMORROW?
• A dollar someone has today can be spent for
consumption or loaned to earn interest
• A dollar loaned earns interest that increases
wealth and the ability to consume
• The rate of interest determines the trade-off
between consumption today and saving
(investing)
The Time Value of Money
o TIMELINES AID PROBLEM SOLVING
• Timelines are an effective way to visualize cash
flows
• Present cash outflows as negative values
• Present cash inflows as positive values
Five-year Timeline for a $10,000 Investment
The Time Value of Money
o FUTURE VALUE VERSUS PRESENT VALUE
• Cash-flows are evaluated based on future value
or present value
• Future value measures what cash-flows are
worth after a certain amount of time has passed
• Present value measures what future cash-flows
are worth before a certain amount of time has
passed
The Time Value of Money
o FUTURE VALUE VERSUS PRESENT VALUE
• Compounding is the process of increasing cash-
flows to a future value
• Discounting is the process of reducing future
cash-flows to a present value
Future Value of $100 at 10 Percent
Future Value and Compounding
o SINGLE PERIOD LOAN
• We can determine the balance in an account at
the end of a period if we know the interest rate
earned on the principal
• If principal of $X is loaned for one period at the
interest rate i, the account balance will increase to $X(1 + i)1
• The term (1+ i)n is the future value interest factor or future value factor
Future Value and Compounding
o TWO-PERIOD LOAN • A two-period loan is two consecutive single-
period loans
• Interest earned is added to the account at the end of the first period and the new account balance is the amount that earns the interest rate i during the second period
• The account balance is $X(1 + i)1 at the end of the first period and $X(1 + i)2 at the end of the second period.
Future Value and Compounding
o TWO-PERIOD LOAN
• The principal is the initial deposit or loan
amount
• Simple interest is paid on the original principal
amount only
• Compound interest consists of both simple
interest and interest-on-interest
How Compound Interest Grows on $100 at 10 Percent
Future Value and Compounding
o FUTURE VALUE EQUATION • The general equation to find a future value
where:
FVn = future value of investment at end of period n
PV = original principle (P0) or present value
i = the rate of interest per period
n = the number of periods, often in years
(5.1)i) (1PV x FV n
n
Future Value and Compounding
FUTURE VALUE EXAMPLE
You deposit $100 in a savings account earning 10%
compounded annually for five years. How much is
in the account at the end of that time?
5
5
5
FV $100 (1 0.10)
= $100 (1.10)
= $100 1.6105
= $161.05
Future Value of $1 for Different Periods and Interest Rates
Future Value Factors
Future Value and Compounding
o COMPOUNDING MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR
• The more frequently interest is compounded,
the larger the future value of $1 at the end of a
given time period
• If compounding occurs m times within a period, the future value equation becomes
).()mi PV x (FV
mn
n 251
Future Value and Compounding
o COMPOUNDING WITHIN A PERIOD EXAMPLE
• You deposit $100 in an account that pays 5%
annually with semi-annual compounding for
two years. What is the ending account balance?
2 2 2
4
FV $100 (1+0.05 / 2)
= $100 (1+0.025)
= $100 (11038)
= $110.38
Future Value and Compounding
o CONTINUOUS COMPOUNDING
• When compounding occurs on a continuous
basis, the future value equation becomes
e = 2.71828, the base of the natural logarithm
)3.5( nin
ePVFV
Future Value and Compounding
o CONTINUOUS COMPOUNDING EXAMPLE
• Your grandmother wants to put $10,000 in a
savings account. How much money will she
have at the end of five years if the bank pays 5%
annual interest compounded continuously?
25.840,12$
284025.1000,10$
)71828.2(000,10$
000,10$
505.0
505.0
eFV n
Using Excel – Future Value and Compounding
Future Value and Compounding
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Future Value
Suppose we lend $5,000 at 15% for 10 years. How much money will we have at the end of that time?
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
10 15 0
20,227.79
-5,000
Present Value and Discounting
o PRESENT VALUE EQUATION
• General equation to find present value
o
• This equation has the same elements as
Equation 5.1, the future value equation. They
differ only in the arrangement of the elements.
Here, (1 + i)n is used for division and is called the present value factor or discount factor.
(5.4) i) (1
FV PV
n
n
Present Value and Discounting
Comparing Future Value & Present Value Calculations
Present Value and Discounting
o PRESENT VALUE EQUATION
• A present value calculation takes end-of-the-
period cash flows and reverses the effect of
compounding to determine the equivalent
beginning-of-the-period cash flows
This is discounting and the interest rate i is called the discount rate.
Present value (PV) is often referred to as the discounted value of future cash-flows.
Present Value and Discounting
o PRESENT VALUE CALCULATION EXAMPLE
• You intend to buy a BMW 330 Sports Coupe one
year from today. You predict the car will cost
$40,000. If your bank pays 5% interest on
savings, compounded annually, how much will
you need to deposit today to have $40,000 after
one year?
095.24 $38,
0.05 1
$10,000 PV
Present Value and Discounting
o PRESENT VALUE CONCEPTS
• Time and the discount rate affect present value
The greater the amount of time before a cash flow is to occur, the smaller the present value of the cash-flow.
The higher the discount rate, the smaller the present value of a future cash-flow.
Present Value Factors
Present Value of $1 for Different Periods and Discount Rates
Future Value and Present Value Compared
Present Value and Discounting
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Present Value
What is the present value of $1,000 to be received 10 years from now if the discount rate is 9%?
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
10 9 0 1,000
-422.41
Finding the Interest Rate
o TIME VALUE OF MONEY CALCULATIONS
• Many situations require using a time value of
money calculation to determine a rate of
change or growth rate
• An investor or analyst may want
the growth rate in sales
the rate-of-return on an investment
the effective interest rate on a loan
Compound Growth Rates
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Compound Growth Rate
A firm’s sales increased from $20 million to $35 million in three years. What was the average annual growth rate in sales?
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
3
20.51
0 35 -20
Compound Growth Rates
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Compound Growth Rate
The house at 1245 Maple St. was appraised at $247,000 in 2006 and at $173,000 in 2011. What is the average annual change in its value?
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
5
-6.874
0 173000 -247000
The Rule of 72
o ESTIMATE THE NUMBER OF PERIODS
• The Rule of 72 is used to estimate the time
(number of periods) it takes for an amount to
double.
The time it takes for the amount to double is approximately equal to 72/i, where i equals the percentage earned each period.
The Rule of 72 is fairly accurate for interest rates between 5% and 20%.
The Rule of 72
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Time required for an amount to double
If you can earn 8% compounded annually, how long will it take for your money to double?
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
9.006
8 0 2 -1
The Rule of 72
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Time required for an amount to double
If you can earn 8% compounded monthly (.667%/month), how many months will it take for an amount to double?
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
104.32
.667 0 2 -1
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Chapter 6: Discounted Cash Flows and Valuation
Learning Objectives
1. EXPLAIN WHY CASH FLOWS OCCURRING AT DIFFERENT TIMES MUST BE ADJUSTED TO REFLECT THEIR VALUE AS OF A COMMON DATE BEFORE THEY CAN BE COMPARED, AND COMPUTE THE PRESENT VALUE AND FUTURE VALUE FOR MULTIPLE CASH FLOWS.
2. DESCRIBE HOW TO CALCULATE THE PRESENT VALUE AND THE FUTURE VALUE OF AN ORDINARY ANNUITY AND HOW AN ORDINARY ANNUITY DIFFERS FROM AN ANNUITY DUE.
Learning Objectives
3. EXPLAIN WHAT A PERPETUITY IS AND WHERE WE SEE THEM IN BUSINESS AND CALCULATE THE VALUE OF A PERPETUITY.
4. DISCUSS GROWING ANNUITIES AND PERPETUITIES, AS WELL AS THEIR APPLICATION IN BUSINESS, AND CALCULATE THEIR VALUES.
5. DISCUSS WHY THE EFFECTIVE ANNUAL INTEREST RATE (EAR) IS THE APPROPRIATE WAY TO ANNUALIZE INTERESTS RATES, AND CALCULATE THE EAR.
Multiple Cash Flows
o FUTURE VALUE OF MULTIPLE CASH FLOWS
1. Draw a timeline to determine the number of
periods for which each cash flow will earn the
rate-of-return
2. Calculate the future value of each cash flow
using Equation 5.1
3. Add the future values
Future Value of Two Cash Flows
6
Exhibit 6.1 Future Value of Two Cash Flows This exhibit shows a timeline for two cash flows invested in a savings account that pays 10 percent interest annually. The total amount in the savings account after two years is $2,310, which is the sum of the future values of the two cash flows.
Future Value of Three Cash Flows
Exhibit 6.2 Future Value of Three Cash Flows The exhibit shows a timeline for an investment program with a three-year horizon. The value of the investment at the end of three years is $3,641, the sum of the future values of the three separate cash flows.
Present Value of Three Cash Flows
8
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o ANNUITY
• A series of equally-spaced and level cash flows
extending over a finite number of periods
o PERPETUITY
• A series of equally-spaced and level cash flows
that continue forever
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o ORDINARY ANNUITY
• cash flows occur at the end of a period
mortgage payment
interest payment to bondholder
Exhibits 6.1, 6.2, and 6.3
o ANNUITY DUE
• cash flows occur at the beginning of a period
lease
Exhibit 6.7
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o CALCULATE PRESENT VALUE OF AN ANNUITY
11
)1.6( )1(
1 1
1
0
i
i CF
i
PVFA CF
PVFACFPVA
n
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o CALCULATE PRESENT VALUE OF AN ANNUITY
• To calculate a future value or a present value is
to calculate an equivalent amount
• The amount reflects an adjustment to account
for the effect of compounding
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o CALCULATE PRESENT VALUE OF AN ANNUITY
Present value of an annuity
amount needed produce the annuity
current fair value or market price of the annuity
amount of a loan that can be repaid with the annuity
19.154,5$ 0.08
0.08)1/(1 (1 $2000PVA
3
3
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o PRESENT VALUE OF AN ANNUITY EXAMPLE
• A contract will pay $2,000 at the end of each
year for three years and the appropriate discount
rate is 8%. What is a fair price for the contract?
14
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Present Value of Annuity
15
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
3 8 2,000 0
-5,154.19
Pmt $2,430.45
Pmt5784.164/000,400$
0.0051042
0.0051042)1/(1 (1 Pmt$400,000
360
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o CALCULATE AN ANNUITY EXAMPLE
• You borrow $400,000 to buy a home. The 30-
year mortgage requires 360 monthly payments
at a monthly rate of 6.15%/12 or .51042%. How
much is the monthly payment?
16
Present Value Annuity Factors
17
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o LOAN AMORTIZATION
• How borrowed funds are repaid over the life of
a loan
• Each payment includes less interest and more
principal; the loan is paid off with the last
payment
• Amortization schedule shows interest and
principal in each payment, and amount of
principal still owed after each payment
Amortization Table for a 5-Yr, $10,000 Loan at 5% Interest
19
Using Excel – Loan Amortization Table
Using Excel – Calculating the Interest Rate for an Annuity
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o FINDING THE INTEREST RATE
• The present value of an annuity equation can be
used to find the interest rate or discount rate for
an annuity
• To determine the rate-of-return for an annuity,
solve the equation for i
• Using a calculator is easier than a trial-and-error
approach
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Finding the Interest Rate
An insurer requires $350,000 to provide a guaranteed annuity of $50,000 per year for 10 years. What is the rate-of-return for the annuity?
23
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
10
7.073
50,000 0 -350,000
(6.2) i
1i)(1 CF
i
1- Factor ValueFuture CF
Factor ValueFuturePVAFVA
n
nn
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o FUTURE VALUE OF AN ANNUITY
• The future value of an annuity equation is
derived from Equation 6.1
24
Future Value of 4-Yr Annuity: Colnago C50 Bicycle
25
Exhibit 6.6 The exhibit shows a timeline for a savings plan to buy a Colnago C50 bicycle. Under this savings plan, $1,000 is invested at the end of each year for four years at an annual interest rate of 8 percent. We find the value at the end of the four-year period by adding the future values of the separate cash flows, just as in Exhibits 6.1 and 6.2.
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
• Future Value of an Annuity
Colnago Bicycle C50
26
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
4 8 1,000
-4,506.11
0
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o PERPETUITY
• A stream of equal cash flows that goes on
forever
• Preferred stock and some bonds are perpetuities
• Equation for the present value of a perpetuity
can be derived from the present value of an
annuity equation
27
).( i
CF
i
)( CF
i
i)( CF
ityor an annue factor fesent valuCFPVP
36
011
1 1
Pr 0
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o PRESENT VALUE OF A PERPETUITY
28
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o VALUING PERPETUITY EXAMPLE
• Suppose you decide to endow a chair in finance.
The goal of the endowment is to provide
$100,000 of financial support per year forever. If
the endowment earns a rate of 8%, how much
money will you have to donate to provide the
desired level of support?
29
000,250,1$ 08.0
000,100$ 0
i
CF PVP
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o ORDINARY ANNUITY VERSUS ANNUITY DUE
• Present Value of Annuity Due
Cash flows are discounted for one period less than in an ordinary annuity.
• Future Value of Annuity Due
Cash flows are earn compound interest for one period more than in an ordinary annuity.
30
Level Cash Flows: Annuities and Perpetuities
o ORDINARY ANNUITY VERSUS ANNUITY DUE
• The present value or future value of an annuity
due is always higher than that of an ordinary
annuity that is otherwise identical.
31
1
Due
1
Due
)(1FVA FVA
(6.4) )(1PVA PVA
i
i
Ordinary Annuity versus Annuity Due
32
Cash Flows That Grow at a Constant Rate
o GROWING ANNUITY
• equally-spaced cash flows that increase in size
at a constant rate for a finite number of periods
o GROWING PERPETUITY
• equally-spaced cash flows that increase in size
at a constant rate forever
Cash Flows That Grow at a Constant Rate
o GROWING ANNUITY
• Multiyear product or service contract with
periodic cash flows that increase at a constant
rate for a finite number of years
o GROWING PERPETUITY
• Common stock whose dividend is expected to
increase at a constant rate forever
34
Cash Flows That Grow at a Constant Rate
o GROWING ANNUITY
• Calculate the present value of growing annuity
(only) when the growth rate is less than the
discount rate.
35
(6.5)
i1
g1 1
g-i
CF PVA
n
1
n
Cash Flows That Grow at a Constant Rate
o GROWING ANNUITY EXAMPLE
• A coffee shop will operate for fifty more years.
Cash flow was $300,000 last year and increases
by 2.5% each year. The discount rate for similar
firms is 15%. Estimate the value of the firm.
128,452,2$
9968.0000,460,2$
15.1
025.1 1
025.015.0
500,307$
500,307$)025.01(000,300$1
50
0
PVA
CF
Cash Flows That Grow at a Constant Rate
o GROWING PERPETUITY
• Use Equation 6.6 to calculate the present value
of growing perpetuity (only) when the growth
rate is less than discount rate.
• It is derived from equation 6.5 when the number
of periods approaches infinity
37
(6.6)
g-i
CF PVP 1
0
Cash Flows That Grow at a Constant Rate
o GROWING PERPETUITY EXAMPLE
• A firm’s cash flow was $450,000 last year. You
expect the cash flow to increase by 5% per year
forever. If you use a discount rate of 18%, what
is the value of the firm?
38
615,634,3$
13.0
500,472$
05.018.0
500,472$
500,307$)05.01(000,450$1
0
PVP
CF
The Effective Annual Interest Rate
o DESCRIBING INTEREST RATES
• The most common way to quote interest rates is
in terms of annual percentage rate (APR). It
does not incorporate the effects of
compounding.
• The most appropriate way to quote interest rates
is in terms of effective annual rate (EAR). It
incorporates the effects of compounding.
39
The Effective Annual Interest Rate
o CALCULATE ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE (APR)
• APR = (periodic rate) x m
m is the # of periods in a year
• APR does not account for the number of
compounding periods or adjust the annualized
interest rate for the time value of money
• APR is not a precise measure of the rates
involved in borrowing and investing
40
The Effective Annual Interest Rate
o ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE (APR) EXAMPLE
• Anna is charged 1% interest when she borrows
$2000 for one week. What is the annual
percentage interest rate (APR) on the loan?
41
52% or 0.52 52 x (0.01) APR
The Effective Annual Interest Rate
o EFFECTIVE ANNUAL INTEREST RATE (EAR)
• EAR accounts for the number of compounding
periods and adjusts the annualized interest rate
for the time value of money
• EAR is a more accurate measure of the rates
involved in lending and investing
42
The Effective Annual Interest Rate
o EFFECTIVE ANNUAL RATE (EAR) EXAMPLE
• Anna is charged 1% interest when she borrows
$2000 for one week. What is the effective annual
interest rate (EAR)?
43
67.77% or 0.6777
1 – 1.6777
1 – 0.01) (1 EAR 52
The Effective Annual Interest Rate
o EFFECTIVE ANNUAL RATE (EAR) EXAMPLE
• Your credit card has an APR of 12 % (1% per
month). What is the EAR?
44
12.68% or 0.1268
1 – 1.1268
1- 0.01) (1
1 – 0.12/12) (1 EAR
12
12
Consumer Protection and Information
o CONSUMER PROTECTION AND INFORMATION
• Truth-in-Lending Act (1968) requires that
borrowers be told the actual cost of credit
• Truth-in-Savings Act (1991) requires that the
actual return on savings be disclosed to
consumers
• Credit Card Act (2009) limits credit card fees
and interest rate increases, and requires better
disclosure of contract details
45
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Chapter 7: Risk and Return
Learning Objectives
1. EXPLAIN THE RELATION BETWEEN RISK AND RETURN.
2. DESCRIBE THE TWO COMPONENTS OF A TOTAL HOLDING PERIOD RETURN, AND CALCULATE THIS RETURN FOR AN ASSET.
3. EXPLAIN WHAT AN EXPECTED RETURN IS AND CALCULATE THE EXPECTED RETURN FOR AN ASSET.
Learning Objectives
4. EXPLAIN WHAT THE STANDARD DEVIATION OF RETURNS IS AND WHY IT IS VERY USEFUL IN FINANCE AND CALCULATE IT FOR AN ASSET.
5. EXPLAIN THE CONCEPT OF DIVERSIFICATION.
6. DISCUSS WHICH TYPE OF RISK MATTERS TO INVESTORS AND WHY.
Learning Objectives
7. DESCRIBE WHAT THE CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODEL (CAPM) TELLS US AND HOW TO USE IT TO EVALUATE WHETHER THE EXPECTED RETURN OF AN ASSET IS SUFFICIENT TO COMPENSATE AN INVESTOR FOR THE RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH THAT ASSET.
Risk and Return
o PEOPLE DO NOT WANT TO LOSE MONEY
• Why would a person choose an investment with
a higher risk of loss when there is a lower-risk
opportunity available?
Risk and Return
o PEOPLE DO NOT WANT TO LOSE MONEY
• A person will prefer a higher-risk opportunity if
the probability of an adequate reward is high
enough
A higher-risk investment must offer a potential return high enough to make it as attractive as the lower-risk alternative.
The potential return a person requires depends on the amount of risk – the probability of being dissatisfied with an outcome.
Risk and Return
o RISK/RETURN RELATIONSHIP
• The higher the risk, the higher the required
rate-of-return (possible/expected return)
This is the risk/return relationship.
Risk and Return
o INSIGHT INTO THE RISK/RETURN RELATIONSHIP
• Most people are risk averse – they do not like
risk
• People vary in their risk tolerance –the amount
of risk they will accept
Risk and Return
o INSIGHT INTO THE RISK/RETURN RELATIONSHIP
• An optimal combination of risk and return is
the highest expected return for a given amount
of risk
• An optimal combination of risk and return is
the lowest level of risk for a given expected
return
Risk and Return
o RISK
• default
• misuse
• slow pay
• theft
o RISK
• cost increase
• price decline
• missed opportunity
• not enough
• ….. many others
Risk and Return
o RETURN
• Refers to expected return.
“Expected” means there is some uncertainty about what the return will actually be. – “I expect to earn around 9%.”
• The higher the risk, the higher the required rate
of (expected) return
Quantitative Measures of Return
o EXPECTED RETURN AND REALIZED RETURN
• Expected return
estimated or predicted before the outcome is known
• Realized return
calculated after the outcome is known – Both are important in financial decision-making.
Quantitative Measures of Return
o HOLDING PERIOD RETURN
• Total holding period return consists of capital
appreciation (Rca) and income (Ri)
00
01
P
P
P
PP
priceinitial
onappreciaticapital R
ca
0
11
P
CF
priceinitial
CF
priceinitial
flowcash R
i
Quantitative Measures of Return
o TOTAL HOLDING PERIOD RETURN
)1.7( 0
1
0
1
0 P
CFP
P
CF
P
P RRR
icat
Quantitative Measures of Return
o TOTAL HOLDING PERIOD RETURN EXAMPLE
• Ella buys a stock for $26.00. After one year, the
stock price is $29.00 and she receives a dividend
of $0.80. What is her return for the period?
%62.1414615.0 00.26$
80.3$
00.26$
80.0$)00.26$00.29($
0
1
or
P
CFP RRR
icat
Quantitative Measures of Return
o EXPECTED RETURN
• E(RAsset), is the weighted average of the
possible investment returns. Multiply each
return by the probability that it will occur,
then add.
)2.7()(…)()()()( 22111 nn
n
i iiasset RpRpRpRpRE
Quantitative Measures of Return
o EXPECTED RETURN EXAMPLE
• There is 30% chance the total return on Dell
stock will be -3.45%, a 30% chance it will be
+5.17% , a 30% chance it will be +12.07% and a
10% chance that it will be +24.14%. Calculate
the expected return.
%55.60655.0
02414.003621.001551.0010305.0
)2414.010(.)1207.030(.
)0517.030(.)0345.0(30.)(
or
RE Del l
Quantitative Measures of Return
o EXPECTED RETURN
• If each possible outcome is equally likely (p1
= p2 = p3 = … = pn = p = 1/n), the expected
return formula reduces to
n
RRRR
n
R RE n
n
i i
asset
…)( )( 3211
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o CALCULATE VARIANCE
1. Square the difference between each possible
outcome and the mean
2. Multiply each squared difference by its
probability of occurring
3. Add
)3.7()()(
1
22
n
i
iiR RERpRVar
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o CALCULATE VARIANCE
• If all possible outcomes are equally likely, the
formula becomes
n
RER n
i
i
R
1
2
2
)(
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o CALCULATE STANDARD DEVIATION
• Standard deviation is the square root of the
variance
2
R
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o VARIANCE AND STANDARD DEVIATION
• Variance and Standard Deviation for Dell Stock
084.00071.0
0071.0
0031.000006.00009.00030.0
)0655.02414.0(10.)0655.01207.0(30.
)0655.00517.0(30.)0655.0345.0(30.
22
222
Dell
Dell
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o NORMAL DISTRIBUTION
• A symmetric distribution completely described
by its mean (average) and standard deviation
Completely described by its mean and standard deviation says they are all we need to draw conclusions about its shape and the location of items in the distribution.
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o NORMAL DISTRIBUTION
• Mean (average) is at the center
• Areas to the left and right of the mean are
mirror images of each other
• Values less than the mean are on the left and
values greater than the mean are on the right
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o NORMAL DISTRIBUTION
• The mean is the reference point to which all
other values in the distribution are compared
• To use standard deviation as a distance
measure, consider how many standard
deviations are between a value in the
distribution and the mean
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o STANDARD DEVIATION
• For a normal distribution, the standard
deviation tells us, based on what has happened
in the past, the probability that an outcome will
occur
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o STANDARD DEVIATION
• Is used in a context similar to “The average
return on the S&P 500 is 3%. What is the
probability of it being between 3% and 1%?”
When the difference between 3% and 1% is converted to
a standard deviation, it becomes a distance.
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o STANDARD DEVIATION
• For a normal distribution, the standard
deviation distance between 3% and 1% is the
same as between 3% and 5%
• Outcomes that occur most often are closest to
the mean – convert to fewer standard deviations.
Outcomes that rarely occur are farthest from the
mean – convert to more standard deviations
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o STANDARD DEVIATION
• A unit of measure or distance
“Forty-three percent of the time, the number is more than the average but less than 62.”
• A measure of frequency
“A professional makes that putt more than 99% of the time.”
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o STANDARD DEVIATION
• For a normal distribution, a standard deviation
is associated with the probability that an
outcome occurs within a certain distance from
the mean
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o STANDARD DEVIATION
• For a normal distribution
90% of outcomes are not more than 1.645 standard deviations from the mean
95% of outcomes are not more than 1.960 standard deviations from the mean
99% of outcomes are not more than 2.575 standard deviations from the mean
Normal Distribution
Standard Deviation and Width of the Normal Distribution
Variance and Standard Deviation as Measures of Risk
o HISTORICAL MARKET PERFORMANCE
• On average, annual returns have been higher for
riskier securities
• Exhibit 7.3 shows that small stocks have the
largest standard deviation of returns and the
largest average return
• On other end of spectrum, Treasury bills have
the smallest standard deviation and the smallest
average return
Distributions of Annual Total Returns for U.S. Stocks & Bonds
Monthly Returns for Apple Inc. Stock and the S&P 500 Index
Cumulative Value of $1 Invested in 1926
Exhibit 7.5
Risk and Diversification
o DIVERSIFICATION
• By investing in two or more assets whose
returns do not always move in same direction at
the same time, investors can reduce the risk in
their investment portfolios
Risk and Diversification
o SINGLE-ASSET PORTFOLIOS
• Returns for individual stocks are largely
independent of each other and approximately
normally distributed. A simple tool for
comparing risk and return for individual stocks
is the coefficient of variation (CV).
)4.7( )(
i
Ri i
RE CV
Risk and Diversification
o COEFFICIENT OF VARIATION EXAMPLE
• Stock A has an expected return of 12% and a
standard deviation of 12% while Stock B has an
expected return of 16% and a standard deviation
of 20%. What is the coefficient of variation for
these stocks?
75. 20.
16. )(
1 12.0
12.0 )(
B
A
RCV
RCV
Risk and Diversification
o SHARPE RATIO
• A modified version of the coefficient of
variation
)5.7(
)(
Ri
rfi RRE
SRatioSharpe
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS OF MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• The coefficient of variation and Sharpe Ratio
have a critical shortcoming when applied to a
portfolio of assets – they cannot account for the
interaction of assets’ risks when they are
grouped into a portfolio
• Expected return for portfolio made up of two
assets
)()()( 2211 RERERE Portfolio xx
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• Expected return for portfolio made up of
multiple assets
)6.7()((
…)(()(()(()( 22111
nn
n
i iiPortfol i o
RE
RERERERE
x
xxx
Risk and Diversification
o EXPECTED RETURN FOR PORTFOLIO EXAMPLE
• A portfolio consists of $100,000 in Treasury bills
that yield 4.5%; $150,000 in Proctor and Gamble
stock with an expected return of 7.5%; and
$150,000 in Exxon Mobil stock with an expected
return of 9.0%. What is the expected return for
this $400,000 portfolio?
Risk and Diversification
o EXPECTED RETURN FOR PORTFOLIO EXAMPLE
%3.70731.0
)90.0375.0()075.0375.0()045.025.0()(
375.0 000,400$
000,150$
25.0 000,400$
000,100$
&
or
RE Portfol io
EMGP
TB
xx
x
Monthly Returns for Netflix & Southwest Airlines (1 of 2)
Exhibit 7.6
Monthly Returns for Netflix & Southwest Airlines (2 of 2)
Exhibit 7.7
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• When stock prices move in opposite directions,
the price change of one stock offsets some of
the price change of another stock
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• Risk for a portfolio of two stocks is less than the
average of the risks associated with the
individual stocks. The portfolio’s risk is
)7.7(2 2,121
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
1
2
2 RRRPortfolioAsset xxxx
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• In the variance equation, is the covariance
between stocks 1 and 2. Covariance indicates
whether stocks’ returns tend to move in the
same direction at the same time. If so, the
covariance is positive. If not, it is negative or
zero.
2,1R
)8.7()(()((),( 2,2
1
1,121
RERRERRRCOV i
n
i
ii p
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIO VARIANCE EXAMPLE
• The variance of the annual returns of CSX and
Wal-Mart stock are 0.03949 and 0.02584
respectively. The covariance between returns is
0.00782. Calculate the variance of a portfolio
consisting of 50% CSX and 50% Wal-Mart.
02024.0
)00782.0)(5.0)(5.0(2)02584.0()5.0()03949.0()5.0(
2
22
2,121
2
2
2
2
2
1
2
1
2
2
RRRPortfolioAsset
xxxx
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
o To measure the strength of the covariance
relationship, divide the covariance by the product
of the standard deviations of the assets’ returns.
This result is the correlation coefficient that
measures the strength of the relationship between
the assets’ returns.
)9.7(
21
2,1
2,1
RR
R
R
o CORRELATION COEFFICIENT EXAMPLE
• Correlation coefficient for the annual returns of
CSX and Wal-Mart
2449.0 1607.01987.0
00782.0
1607.002584.0
1987.003949.0
,
,
WalMartCSX
WalmartCSX
WalmartCSX
WalMart
CSX
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• A correlation coefficient cannot be greater than
+1 or less than -1
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• Negative correlation
stock X is higher when stock Y is lower; stock X is lower when stock Y is higher
• Positive correlation
stock X is higher when stock Y is higher; stock X is lower when stock Y is lower
• Zero Correlation
no relationship or pattern linking returns on the stocks.
Risk and Diversification
o PORTFOLIOS WITH MORE THAN ONE ASSET
• If assets are not perfectly correlated, risk can be
reduced by creating a portfolio using assets
having different risk characteristics
• For each asset, account for the covariance
between that asset and every other asset in the
portfolio
Risk and Diversification
o LIMITS ON DIVERSIFICATION BENEFITS
• Adding an asset whose returns do not replicate
the returns on an asset already in the portfolio
will reduce the standard deviation of the
portfolio returns
The amount by which the standard deviation of portfolio returns is reduced gets smaller with each asset added
Risk and Diversification
o LIMITS OF DIVERSIFICATION
• When the number of assets in a portfolio is
large, adding another stock has almost no effect
on the standard deviation
• Most risk-reduction from diversification may be
achieved with 15-20 assets
• Diversification can virtually eliminate risk
unique to individual assets, but the risk
common to all assets in the market remains
Risk and Diversification
o THE LIMITS OF DIVERSIFICATION
• Firm-specific risk relevant for a particular firm
can be diversified away and is called
diversifiable, unsystematic, or unique risk.
• Risk that cannot be diversified away is non-
diversifiable, or systematic risk. This is the risk
inherent in the market or economy.
Firm-specific risk is, in effect, reduced to zero in a diversified portfolio but some systematic risk remains.
Total Risk in a Portfolio as the Number of Assets Increases
Exhibit 7.8
Systematic Risk
o WHY SYSTEMATIC RISK IS ALL THAT MATTERS
• Investors do not like risk and will not bear risk
they can avoid by diversification
Well-diversified portfolios contain only systematic risk.
Portfolios that are not well-diversified face systematic risk plus unsystematic risk.
No one compensates investors for bearing unsystematic risk, and investors will not accept risk that they are not paid to take.
Systematic Risk
o MEASURING SYSTEMATIC RISK
• Systematic risk of an individual asset depends
on how the behavior of the market influences
the return on that asset. Systematic risk cannot
be eliminated by diversification.
• Standard deviation measures total risk of an
asset. It cannot be used to measure the risk of a
diversified portfolio.
Monthly General Electric Company Stock and S&P 500 Index Returns
Exhibit 7.9
Slope of Relation Between GE Returns and S&P 500 Returns
Exhibit 7.10
Systematic Risk
o MEASURING SYSTEMATIC RISK
• If the average return for all assets (the market
return) is used as the benchmark and its
influence on the return for a specific stock can
be quantified, the expected return on that stock
can be calculated
• The market’s influence on a stock’s return is
quantified in the stock’s beta
Systematic Risk
o MEASURING SYSTEMATIC RISK
• If the beta of an asset is
zero, the market has no measurable effect on the asset’s return
positive, the market has a positive effect on the asset’s return
negative, the market has a negative effect on the asset’s return
Systematic Risk
o MEASURING SYSTEMATIC RISK
• If the beta of an asset is
0, the asset has no measurable systematic risk
> 1, the systematic risk for the asset is greater than the average for assets in the market
< 1, the systematic risk for the asset is less than the average for assets in the market
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o MEASURING SYSTEMATIC RISK
• The risk premium is the difference between the
market rate of return and the risk-free rate of
return
• The difference between the required return on a
risky asset (Ri) and the return on a risk-free
asset Rrf is an investor’s compensation for risk
• E(Ri) = Rrf + Compensation for bearing
Systematic risk
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o MEASURING SYSTEMATIC RISK
• Since compensation for bearing systematic risk
depends on the asset
E(Ri) = Rrf + (Amount of Systematic Risk) (Compensation/Unit of Systematic Risk)
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o MEASURING SYSTEMATIC RISK
• Beta is the number of units of systematic risk
• Compensation for Risk = β (Compensation
per Unit of Systematic Risk)
• Compensation per Unit of Systematic Risk =
E(Rm) – Rrf
• Equation 7.10 is the Capital Asset Pricing Model
(7.10)R – )E(R R )E(R rfmirfi
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODEL
• The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
describes the relationship between risk and
required expected return for an asset
rfmirfi
R – )E(R R )E(R
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODEL EXAMPLE
• A stock has a beta of 1.5. The expected return
on the market is 10% and the risk-free rate is
4%. What is the expected return for the stock?
%1313.0
0.04-0.101.50 0.04
)R – )(E(R R )E(R rfmirfi
or
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o THE SECURITY MARKET LINE
• The graph of the CAPM equation is known as
the Security Market Line (SML)
• The SML illustrates the CAPM’s prediction for
the required expected total return for various
values of beta. The expected total return
depends on an asset’s current price.
0
1)( P
CFP RE
T
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
Exhibit 7.11 The Security Market Line
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o THE SECURITY MARKET LINE
• If the expected return is greater than the
required return estimated with the CAPM, the
expected return will plot above the SML
• If the expected return is less than the required
return estimated with the CAPM, the expected
return will plot below the SML
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o THE SECURITY MARKET LINE
• If an asset’s expected return plots above the
SML, the asset is considered underpriced
• If an asset’s expected return plots below the
SML, the asset is considered overpriced
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o THE CAPM AND PORTFOLIO RETURNS
• The expected return for a portfolio is the
weighted average of the expected returns of the
assets in the portfolio
• The beta of a portfolio is the weighted average
of the betas of the assets in the portfolio
)10.7()(…)()()(
22111 nn
n
i iiportfol ioassetn x xxx
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o PORTFOLIO BETA EXAMPLE
• You invest 25% of your retirement savings in a
fully diversified market fund, 25% in risk-free
Treasury bills, and 50% in a house with twice as
much systematic risk as the market. What is the
beta of your portfolio?
25.1
)00.250.0()00.025.0()0.125.0(
)()()()( 1
HouseHouseTBTBFundFund
n
i iiportfol io x xxx
Compensation for Bearing Systematic Risk
o EXPECTED PORTFOLIO RETURN EXAMPLE
• In the previous problem, what rate of return
would you expect to earn from the portfolio if
the risk-free rate is 4% and the expected return
on the market 10%?
% 11.5 or 0.115,
(0.06) 1.2504.0
04.010.025.1 0.04
)( R )E(R Portfoli o AssetnrfPortfoli o Assetn
rfm
RRE
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D. DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D. THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.
Bond Valuation and the Structure of Interest Rates
Learning Objectives
1. DESCRIBE THE MARKET FOR CORPORATE BONDS AND THREE TYPES OF CORPORATE BONDS.
2. EXPLAIN HOW TO CALCULATE THE VALUE OF A BOND AND WHY BOND PRICES VARY NEGATIVELY WITH INTEREST RATE MOVEMENTS.
3. DISTINGUISH BETWEEN A BOND’S COUPON RATE, YIELD TO MATURITY, AND EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD.
Learning Objectives
4. EXPLAIN WHY INVESTORS IN BONDS ARE SUBJECT TO INTEREST RATE RISK AND WHY IT IS IMPORTANT TO UNDERSTAND THE BOND THEOREMS.
5. DISCUSS THE CONCEPT OF DEFAULT RISK AND KNOW HOW TO COMPUTE A DEFAULT RISK PREMIUM.
6. DESCRIBE THE FACTORS THAT DETERMINE THE LEVEL AND SHAPE OF THE YIELD CURVE.
Corporate Bonds
o MARKET FOR CORPORATE BONDS
• Life insurance companies and pension funds
buy most corporate bonds
Transactions tend to be in very large dollar amounts.
• Less than 1% of all corporate bonds are traded
on organized exchanges
Most transactions take place through dealers in the over-the-counter (OTC) market.
Corporate Bonds
o MARKET FOR CORPORATE BONDS
• At the end of 2007, the amount of corporate and
foreign debt outstanding was $10.1 trillion,
ranking the debt market second behind the
market for corporate equity ($20.8 trillion).
Corporate Bonds
o MARKET FOR CORPORATE BONDS
• Only a small fraction of the bonds outstanding
are traded each day.
The market is thin compared to markets for money- market securities and stocks.
Corporate bonds are less marketable than securities with large daily trading volumes.
Prices in the market tend to be more volatile than those of securities with greater trading volumes.
Corporate Bonds
o BOND PRICE INFORMATION
• Corporate bond pricing is not considered
transparent.
It is difficult for investors to obtain important information on prices and volume.
Many transactions are negotiated directly between buyer and seller with little centralized reporting of transaction details.
Corporate Bonds
o FEATURES OF CORPORATE BONDS
• long-term claims against company assets
• face (par) value is $1,000
• coupon rate is the annual coupon payment (C)
divided by a bond’s face value (F)
• fixed amounts paid to lenders for the life of the
contract
Vanilla Bonds
o TYPES OF CORPORATE BONDS
• Vanilla bond
coupon payments fixed for the life of the bond
repay principal and retire the bonds at maturity
contracts have the features and provisions found in most bond covenants.
annual or semiannual coupon payments
Zero Coupon Bonds
o TYPES OF CORPORATE BONDS
• Zero coupon bond
no coupon payments
pays face value at maturity.
sell at deep discount
Convertible Bonds
o TYPES OF CORPORATE BONDS
• Convertible bonds
may be exchanged for shares of the firm’s stock
sells for a higher price than a comparable non- convertible bond
bondholders benefit if the market value of the company’s stock gets high enough
Bond Valuation
o BOND PRICE
• In an efficient market, the price of an asset
equals the present value of its future cash flows.
• To calculate a bond’s price, follow the same
process used to value any financial asset.
Bond Valuation
CALCULATE BOND PRICE
• Determine the required rate-of-return
• Determine expected future cash flows – the
coupon payments and par value
• Compute the current market value, or price (PB)
by calculating the present value of the expected
cash flows
PB = PVCoupon Payments+ PVPar Value
Bond Valuation
o GENERAL EQUATION FOR THE PRICE OF A BOND
)1.8( )1(
… )1()1(
2
2
1
1
n
nn
B
i
FC
i
C
i
C P
Cash Flows for a Three-Year Bond
Bond Valuation
o BOND VALUATION EXAMPLE
• Calculator solution
Determine the price of the bond in Exhibit 8.1 with a financial calculator
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
3 10 80 1,000
-950.26
Using Excel – Calculate Bond Price
Bond Valuation
o PAR, PREMIUM, AND DISCOUNT BONDS
• If a bond’s coupon rate is equal to the its yield,
its price equals its face value; it is a par bond
• If a bond’s coupon rate is less than its yield, its
price is less than its face value; it is a discount
bond
• If a bond’s coupon rate is greater than its yield,
its price is greater than its face value; it is a
premium bond
Bond Valuation
o SEMIANNUAL COMPOUNDING
• Most bonds issued in Europe pay annual
coupons, most issued in the U.S. pay
semiannual coupons
• Eq. 8.2 shows how to value bonds that pay semi-
annual coupons
)2.8( )1(
… )1()1()1(
321 mn
mn
B
mi
FmC
mi
mC
mi
mC
mi
mC P
Bond Valuation
o SEMIANNUAL COMPOUNDING EXAMPLE
• What is the price of a three-year, 5% coupon
bond with a market yield of 8% and semi-
annual coupon payments?
Semi-annual market yield = 8%/2 = 4%
Semi-annual coupon payment = $50/2 = $25
36.921$
07.810$55.20$37.21$22.22$11.23$04.24$
)04.1(
1000$25$
)04.1(
25$
)04.1(
25$
)04.1(
25$
)04.1(
25$
)04.1(
25$ 654321
B P
Bond Valuation
o CALCULATOR SOLUTION
• Semiannual Compounding Example
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
6 4 25 1,000
-921.37
Bond Valuation
o ZERO COUPON BONDS
• Zero coupon bonds do not make coupon
payments but pay their face value at maturity
• The price (or yield) of a zero coupon bond is a
special case of Equation 8.2, where all coupon
payments equal zero
Bond Valuation
o ZERO COUPON BONDS
• Pricing equation for a zero coupon bond
• Zero coupon bonds pay cash only at maturity
and must sell for less than similar bonds which
make periodic interest payments
)3.8( )1(
mn
mn
B
mi
F P
Bond Valuation
o ZERO COUPON BOND PRICE EXAMPLE
• What is the price of a zero coupon bond with a
$1,000 face value, 10-year maturity, and
semiannual compounding? The market rate on
similar bonds is 12%.
80.311$ )06.01(
1000$
)212.01(
1000$ 2020
B P
Bond Yields
o YIELD TO MATURITY (YTM)
• YTM
the rate that makes the present value of the bond’s cash flows equal the price of bond
the rate a bondholder earns if the bond is held to maturity and all coupon and principal payments are made as promised – changes daily as interest rates change
Bond Yields
o EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD • In bond trading, the EAR is called the effective
annual yield (EAY). The way to annualize a bond yield
• Simple annual yield is yield per period multiplied by the number of compounding periods; for bonds with annual compounding, simple annual yield = semiannual yield 2
1 – rate/m) Quoted (1 EAY m
Bond Yields
o YIELD TO MATURITY AND EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD EXAMPLE
• An investor buys a 30-year bond with a $1,000
face value for $800. The bond’s coupon rate is
8% and interest payments are made semi-
annually. What are the bond’s yield to maturity
and effective annual yield?
Bond Yields
o YIELD TO MATURITY AND EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD EXAMPLE
• Step 1:
Enter
Answer
N i PMT PV FV
60
5.07
40 1,000 -800
Bond Yields
o YIELD TO MATURITY AND EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD EXAMPLE
• Step 2:
Calculate YTM
Enter
Answer
x =
.0507 2
.1014
Bond Yields
o YIELD TO MATURITY AND EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD EXAMPLE
• Step 3:
Calculate EAY
Enter
Answer
X2
– = 1.0507
1
.1040
Bond Yields
o REALIZED YIELD
• The return earned on a bond given the cash
flows actually received by investor
• The interest rate at which the present value of
actual cash flows generated by the investment
equals bond’s price
• The realized yield is important because it allows
investors to see what they actually earned on
their investments.
Interest Rate Risk
o BOND THEOREMS
• Bond theorems are statements about the math used
in bond pricing.
Bond prices are inversely related to interest rate movements.
As interest rates decline, prices of bonds rise; as interest rates rise, prices of bonds decline.
For a given change in interest rates, prices of longer-term bonds change more than prices of shorter-term bonds.
Interest rate risk increases as maturity increases, but at a decreasing rate.
Relation Between Bond Price Volatility and Maturity Exhibit 8.2 Relation Between Bond Price Volatility and Maturity
Interest Rate Risk
o BOND THEOREMS
• For a given change in interest rates, prices of
lower-coupon bonds change more than prices
of higher-coupon bonds.
Relation Between Bond Price Volatility and the Coupon Rate
Interest Rate Risk
o BOND THEOREM APPLICATIONS
• If interest rates are expected to increase, avoid
long-term bonds – they will experience the
largest price declines.
• If interest rates are expected to decline, buy
zero-coupon bonds. Their prices will increase
more than those of coupon-paying bonds.
The Structure of Interest Rates
o RISK CHARACTERISTICS OF BONDS
• Four features of debt instruments are
responsible for most of the differences in
corporate borrowing costs and determine the
level and structure of interest rates:
Marketability
Call feature
Default risk
Term-to-maturity
The Structure of Interest Rates
o MARKETABILITY
• How quickly and easily a security can be sold at
at low transaction cost and at fair market value
The selling price varies directly with the degree of marketability.
The transaction cost varies inversely with the degree of marketability.
The yield-to-maturity varies inversely with the degree of marketability.
The Structure of Interest Rates
o MARKETABILITY
• The difference in yields between a highly
marketable security (ihigh mkt) and a less
marketable security (ilow mkt) is the marketability
risk premium (MRP)
• U.S. Treasury bills are considered the most
marketable of all securities
0 – i iMRP low mkthigh mkt
The Structure of Interest Rates
o CALL PROVISION
• Bond issuer’s option to purchase a bond from
the bondholder at a predetermined price before
maturity.
When bonds are called, bondholders suffer financial loss because they must surrender higher-yield bonds and replace them with lower-yield bonds.
The Structure of Interest Rates
o CALL PROVISION • The difference in interest rates between a callable
bond and a non-callable bond is the call premium (CIP)
• Callable bonds sell for lower prices and higher yields than non-callable bonds
• Bonds paying high yields are more likely to be called when interest rates decline; these bonds have a high CIP
0 – i iCIP cal lnocal l
The Structure of Interest Rates
o DEFAULT RISK
• Risk that a borrower may not make payments as
promised
• Lenders are paid a default risk premium for
purchasing securities with default risk
• The default risk premium (DRP) is the
difference between the yield on a security with
default risk, idr, and the risk-free rate, irf
• Yield on T-bills is a proxy for the risk-free rate.
The Structure of Interest Rates
o BOND RATINGS
• Individuals and small businesses rely on outside
agencies for information on the default potential
of bonds.
The two most prominent credit rating agencies are Moody’s Investors Service (Moody’s) and Standard & Poor’s (S&P). – Both services rank bonds in order of probability of default and
publish ratings as letter grades.
The Structure of Interest Rates
o BOND RATINGS
• The highest grade bonds have the lowest default
risk and are rated Aaa or AAA.
Investment grade bonds are rated Aaa to Baa.
State and federal laws typically require commercial banks, insurance companies, pension funds, certain other financial institutions, and government agencies to purchase only investment-grade securities.
Corporate Bond Rating Systems
Default Risk Premiums for Selected Bond Ratings
Exhibit 8.5 Default Risk Premiums for Selected Bond Ratings
The Structure of Interest Rates
o TERM STRUCTURE OF INTEREST RATES
• The term structure of interest rates
the relationship between yield to maturity and term-to- maturity on a bond
the graph of the term structure of interest rates is a yield curve – The shape and position of the yield curve are not constant.
– As the overall level of interest rates changes, the yield curve shifts up and down and changes its shape and slope.
The Structure of Interest Rates
o BASIC SHAPES (SLOPES) OF YIELD CURVES
1. Ascending or normal yield curves slope
upward from left to right and imply higher
interest rates are likely
2. Descending or inverted yield curves slope
downward from left to right and imply lower
interest rates are likely
3. Flat yield curves imply interest rates unlikely
to change
The Structure of Interest Rates
o SHAPE OF THE YIELD CURVE
• Three factors that influence the shape of the
yield curve
1) Real rate of interest
2) Expected rate of inflation
3) Interest rate risk
The Structure of Interest Rates
o THE REAL RATE OF INTEREST
• The real rate of interest changes with the
business cycle.
Highest rates occur at the end of an economic expansion.
Lowest rates occur at the end of an economic contraction.
Changes in the expected future real rate of interest can affect the slope of the yield curve.
The Structure of Interest Rates
o THE EXPECTED RATE OF INFLATION
• If higher inflation is forecast, the yield curve
will slope upward because longer-term yields
will contain a larger inflation premium than
shorter-term yields
• If investors believe inflation will subside, the
yield curve will slope downward
The Structure of Interest Rates
o INTEREST RATE RISK
• The longer the maturity of a security, the
greater its interest rate risk – the risk of selling
the security at a lower price – and the higher its
yield-to-maturity
• The interest rate risk premium adds upward
bias to the slope of the yield curve
Yield Curves for Treasury Securities at Three Different Points in Time
Exhibit 8.6
The Structure of Interest Rates
o CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF FACTORS
• In an economic expansion, the real rate of
interest and the inflation premium increase
monotonically . Interest rate risk increases.
• In an economic contraction, the real rate of
interest and inflation premium decrease
monotonically. Interest rate risk decreases.

