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Corporate Finance chapter 1 Material Type: Notes; Class: Investments; Subject: Finance; University: New Brunswick College of Craft and Design; Term: Forever 1989;
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This chapter introduced you to some of the basic ideas in corporate finance. In it, we saw that:
20 PART ONE Overview of Corporate Finance
1. The Financial Management Decision Process What are the three types of fi- nancial management decisions? For each type of decision, give an example of a business transaction that would be relevant. 2. Sole Proprietorships and Partnerships What are the four primary disadvan- tages of the sole proprietorship and partnership forms of business organization? What benefits are there to these types of business organization as opposed to the corporate form? 3. Corporations What is the primary disadvantage of the corporate form of or- ganization? Name at least two of the advantages of corporate organization. 4. Corporate Finance Organization In a large corporation, what are the two distinct groups that report to the chief financial officer? Which group is the fo- cus of corporate finance? 5. Goal of Financial Management What goal should always motivate the ac- tions of the firm’s financial manager? 6. Agency Problems Who owns a corporation? Describe the process whereby the owners control the firm’s management. What is the main reason that an
agency relationship exists in the corporate form of organization? In this context, what kinds of problems can arise?
7. Primary versus Secondary Markets You’ve probably noticed coverage in the financial press of an initial public offering (IPO) of a company’s securities. Is an IPO a primary-market transaction or a secondary-market transaction? 8. Auction versus Dealer Markets What does it mean when we say the New York Stock Exchange is an auction market? How are auction markets different from dealer markets? What kind of market is Nasdaq? 9. Not-for-Profit Firm Goals Suppose you were the financial manager of a not- for-profit business (a not-for-profit hospital, perhaps). What kinds of goals do you think would be appropriate? 10. Goal of the Firm Evaluate the following statement: Managers should not fo- cus on the current stock value because doing so will lead to an overemphasis on short-term profits at the expense of long-term profits. 11. Ethics and Firm Goals Can our goal of maximizing the value of the stock conflict with other goals, such as avoiding unethical or illegal behavior? In particular, do you think subjects like customer and employee safety, the envi- ronment, and the general good of society fit in this framework, or are they essentially ignored? Try to think of some specific scenarios to illustrate your answer. 12. International Firm Goal Would our goal of maximizing the value of the stock be different if we were thinking about financial management in a foreign country? Why or why not? 13. Agency Problems Suppose you own stock in a company. The current price per share is $25. Another company has just announced that it wants to buy your company and will pay $35 per share to acquire all the outstanding stock. Your company’s management immediately begins fighting off this hostile bid. Is management acting in the shareholders’ best interests? Why or why not? 14. Agency Problems and Corporate Ownership Corporate ownership varies around the world. Historically, individuals have owned the majority of shares in public corporations in the United States. In Germany and Japan, however, banks, other large financial institutions, and other companies own most of the stock in public corporations. Do you think agency problems are likely to be more or less severe in Germany and Japan than in the United States? Why? In recent years, large financial institutions such as mutual funds and pension funds have been be- coming the dominant owners of stock in the United States, and these institutions are becoming more active in corporate affairs. What are the implications of this trend for agency problems and corporate control? 15. Executive Compensation Critics have charged that compensation to top management in the United States is simply too high and should be cut back. For example, focusing on large corporations, Millard Drexler of clothing retailer The Gap has been one of the best compensated CEOs in the United States, earning about $13 million in 2001 alone and almost $400 million over the 1996– period. Are such amounts excessive? In answering, it might be helpful to recog- nize that superstar athletes such as Tiger Woods, top entertainers such as Bruce Willis and Oprah Winfrey, and many others at the top of their respective fields earn at least as much, if not a great deal more.
CHAPTER 1 Introduction to Corporate Finance 21