Recent Financial Statements 1. Retained Earnings increase 25% 2.

Post on 13-Jan-2016

224 views 0 download

Transcript of Recent Financial Statements 1. Retained Earnings increase 25% 2.

Recent Financial Statements

1

Retained Earnings increase 25%

2

3

(5)ROSENGARTEN CORPORATION

Pro forma balance sheet after 25% sales increase($) (Δ,$) ($) (Δ,$)

Assets Liabilities and Owner's Equity

Current assets Current liabilites Cash $200 $40 A/P $375 $75

A/R 550 110 Notes payable 100 0 Inventory 750 150 Total $475 $75Total $1,500 $300

Long-term debt $800 $0Fixed assets Owner's equity Net plant and Common stock $800 $0 equipment $2,250 $450 Retained earnings 1,110 110

Total $1,910 $110

Total assets $3,750 $750Total liabilities and shareholder's equity $3,185 $185

Cap. Int. Ratio=33750/1250 External financing

needed $565

4

EFN and Capacity Usage (overhead 27)

Suppose Rosengarten is operating at 80% capacity:

1. sales at full capacity 1000/.8=1250

2. What is the capital intensity ratio at full capacity? 3300/1250 =2.64

3. What is EFN? 300-185=115 565-450=115Conclusion: excess capacity

reduces the need for external financing and capital intensity ratio

5

(5)ROSENGARTEN CORPORATION

Pro forma balance sheet after 25% sales increase if no Δ FA needed($) (Δ,$) ($) (Δ,$)

Assets Liabilities and Owner's Equity

Current assets Current liabilites Cash $200 $40 A/P $375 $75

A/R 550 110 Notes payable 100 0 Inventory 750 150 Total $475 $75Total $1,500 $300

Long-term debt $800 $0Fixed assets Owner's equity Net plant and Common stock $800 $0 equipment $1800 0 Retained earnings 1,100 110

Total $1,910 $110

Total assets $3,300 $300Total liabilities and shareholder's equity $3,185 $185External financing needed 115

6

EFN and Capacity Usage (Homework)Suppose Rosengarten is

operating at 86.95% capacity: 1. What would be sales at full

capacity? 2. What is the capital intensity

ratio at full capacity?3. What is EFN (sales increase

25%)?

Operating at 86.95%

7

8

(5)ROSENGARTEN CORPORATION

Pro forma balance sheet after 25% sales increase if no Δ FA needed($) (Δ,$) ($) (Δ,$)

Assets Liabilities and Owner's Equity

Current assets Current liabilites Cash $200 $40 A/P $375 $75

A/R 550 110 Notes payable 100 0 Inventory 750 150 Total $475 $75Total $1,500 $300

Long-term debt $800 $0Fixed assets Owner's equity Net plant and Common stock $800 $0

equipment 1956.52156.5

2 Retained earnings 1,110 110 Total $1,910 $110

Total assets 3,456.52 456.52

Total liabilities and shareholder's equity $3,185 $185External financing needed 271.52

Solution1000/.8695=1,1501800/1150*100=156.52 (∆ FA)

456.52-185=271.52

9

SOME LESSONS FROM CAPITAL MARKET HISTORYHTTP://WWW.EFINANCIALCAREERS-CANADA.COM/

HTTP://WWW.GLOBAL-DERIVATIVES.COM/INDEX.PHP?OPTION=COM_CONTENT&TASK=VIEW&ID=54&ITEMID=36

10

Chapter OverviewReturn of an investment: arithmetic

and geometric

The variability of returns

Efficiency of capital markets

11

Return from a Security (1)Dollar return vs. percentage

returnTwo sources of return

◦dividend income◦capital gain (loss)

realized or unrealized

12

Dividend Yield Capital Gain

t

tt

ti P

PP

P

DivR

1

MeanAssume the distribution is normal

Mean return - the most likely return

A measure of centrality

Best estimator of future expected returns

13

The First LessonThe difference between T-bills and

other investment classes can be interpreted as a measure of the excess return on the risky asset

14

Risk premium = the excess return required from an investment in a risky asset over a risk-free investment

Arithmetic vs. Geometric Averages (1)

Geometric return = the average compound return earned per year over multiyear period

Arithmetic average return = the return earned in an average (typical) year over a multiyear period

15

Geometric average return = 1)1(*...*)1(*)1( 21 T

TRRR

Arithmetic vs. Geometric Averages (2)The geometric average tells what an

investor has earned per year on average, compounded annually.

The geometric average is smaller than the arithmetic (exception: 0 variability in returns)

Geom. average ≈ arithmetic average – Var/2

16

Which Average to Use? Geometric mean is appropriate for

making investment statements about past performance and for estimating returns over more than 1 period

Arithmetic mean is appropriate for making investment statements in a forward-looking context and for estimating average return over 1 period horizon

17

The Variability of ReturnsVariance = the average squared

deviation between the actual return and the average return

Standard deviation = the positive square root of the variance

18

2

1

)()(

T

RRRVar i

Var

Standard DeviationMeasure of dispersion of the

returns’ distribution

Used as a measure of risk

Can be more easily interpreted than the variance because the standard deviation is expressed in the same units as observations

19

The Normal Distribution (1)A symmetric, bell-shaped

frequency distribution

Can be completely described by the mean and standard deviation

20

The Normal Distribution (2)

21

Z-scoreFor any normal random variable:

Z – z-scoreX – normal random variable - meanhttp://www.mathsisfun.com/

data/standard-normal-distribution-table.html 22

X

Z

Yet Another Measure of Risk

• How much can a bank lose during one year?

• Usually reported at 5% or 1% level

23

VaR = statistical measure of maximum loss used by banks and other financial institutions to manage risk exposures

The Second LessonThe greater the potential reward

the greater the risk

Which types of securities have higher potential reward?

24

Capital Market EfficiencyEfficient capital market -

market in which security prices reflect available information

Efficient market hypothesis - the hypothesis that actual capital markets are efficient

25

What assumptions imply efficient capital market?1. Large number of profit-

maximizing participants analyze and value securities

2. New information about the securities come in random fashion

3. Profit-maximizing investors adjust security price rapidly to reflect the effect of new information

26

Forms of Market EfficiencyWeak form – the current price of

a stock reflects its own past prices

Semistrong form – all public information is reflected in stock price

Strong form – all information (private and public) is reflected in stock prices

27

Weak Form EfficiencyCurrent stock price reflects all security

market informationYou should gain little from the use of

any trading rule that decides whether to buy/sell security based on the passed security market data

Major markets (TSX, NYSE, NASDAQ) are at least weak form efficient

January effect

28

Semistrong Form EfficiencyMutual fund managers have no special

ability to beat the market

Event studies (IPO, stock splits) support the semistrong hypothesis

Quarterly earnings surprise – test results indicate abnormal returns during 13-26 weeks following the announcement of large unanticipated earnings change (earnings surprise) in a company 29

Strong Form EfficiencyNo group of investors has access to

private information that will allow them to consistently experience above average profits

Evidence shows that corporate insiders and stock exchange specialists are able to derive above-average profits

30

31